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https://archive.org/details/practicalfancycoOOcar| 


PRACTICAL AND FANCY 


mOoOKk BOOK, 


FOR EVERY HOUSEHOLD. 





BY 


MRS. HIELEN. 1. CARLTON, 


A CAROLINA LADY OF TWENTY-EIGHT YEARS’ EXPERIENCE. 





PRESS OF COURIER-JOURNAL JOB PRINTING COMPANY, 
LOUISVILLE, KY. 


In giving my knowledge and experience for the 
benefit of 
YOUNG HOUSEKEEPERS, 
L have endeavored to express myself so simply 
that tf the directions are followed, any woman 


can be an expert in the culinary art and 
mistress of her own kitchen. 


M08, fd eee 
Statesville AN ae: 


PIAS TOR 


TENG Eo 


BREAD AND YEAST. 


PAGE. PAGE, 
Ses etnias? 4 Short Cakes: i... 5 GAB 8 
Aunt Patsy’s Weastis.-,. tae a7 oh excellent.Buns 9 
Peexet Books... Wee oe Loal- Cake that will: keep a a year 9 
Quick Biscuit or Tea Loses Be Dreaktastpeols: 506, =item 
MUFFINS AND PANCAKES. 
Peewowers fs. 8... . 3°. 10° “Green Corn Pancakes. >... 25 
Roterowrancakes ., . . 5. ntO eM Buckwheat Pancakesic-. to2.4,3 26 
See eeakesture. so... 31 French Ege Toast . 4.3% so. te 
MEATS AND POT PIES. 
Beefsteak, Spanish style ... 11 To Roasta Turkey ..... 14 
Mecrereakevocm Duck . <>). 11. To Boil-a Ham (>. 0... 14 
Roast Beef . Mee eee ete ete. ch Col ry Ham i.e vole. Ge ES 
Chicken Layer io ie eee Delicious Wried? Hamicst 7 od. Sps 
Chicken Pudding and Eom 222" \To Bou Salt Mackerelcvniise 3a ta 5 
nee redeemickene) ks, (12 “<8To Stew Oysters. ws.) aes 16 
Men eeurerenmeda... ©. sy. 12 |i Roast Duck... 3 2) 8 ae L296 
Pypuedeouicken 6.28) 132. To Clean Fish - 2. Ly 
perec.Chickeny*.):. 3.5.13 ‘Fried Fishiof any Rend vise. ‘7 
Smothered Chicken .. . Dope Oc Bro, Oualsseeata: a Feb ae 16 
Dressing for eee or Roast MOLE Sted Koss eke an) cic ome By 
Ghicken= 067 ‘ 14g hoslrysOysters: (a0. ecs othr meses he 
SIDE DISHES. 
Buoauettes Of Cold Meats’.s- .. 18° ~ Fish. Muddlé 4" y-.2% 2 tou 
mereerny Croguettes: Ja... Loe salmon al Gratin. “ests. et 10 
MaKe OASt6, els. 1% as oes hoes “CHICKEN. Salads ise ene. on 
GCM DOCIN Oars sue es eto Oe and Wich Wes Vota Oo 
PEEP SECOITAWS. 5 So. ss tse «19 
VEGETABLES, 

Siifted Tomatoes “<<. ' «34020 /5Cold Slaw -..; (ati deere l 
eireamed Potatoes:. 4... . . 20° <Cold Turnip Salad. meet eis wadteos 
SAUCES AND SWEET PICKLES. 

Beerberty sauce’ “.)... ¢ 2). 22) “Peach Sweet Pickle® 24) 3. he 22: 
Tomato Sauce. . mraz) tPear Sweetelickicc ant aA) aac E 


Green Grape Sweet Pickle . . 21 Green Tomato Sweet Pickle. . 22 
JELLIES, JAMS AND CORDIALS. 


Prune Jelly . . BS airy Se eee aco 2 DlackDerry.-|Alin aes he tere 
Ree BIOTY fot ets tas) oto ew, 23... lackberry Cordial ti ae oe ed 
Peri VeLelly™, iy a2. 06 fb. -vae3 2 ollawberry Cordial a. <a o24. 


4 INDEX. 


VARIOUS SIDE DISHES. 


PAGE. PAGE. 
Cheese Omelet... . ... 25) Orange loate. an Xsan 26 
Poached Eggs... 0. 30. 25 eer ae ae ee 27 
Oyster Pie «0.0.0.0 eas 920). ean Sa eee ee ao 26 
Charlotte Russe. . ..... 25  Whata Lemonwilldo... 27 
PICKLES AND CATSUPS. 
Tomato Catsup .... . i°. . 31 (Chto we@hows 30 
Cucumber Pickles’... 2 °...-. (28>) Cubdmienseick ecm 30 
Sliced Cucumber Pickle . . . 28 Virginia Mixed Pickles. . 30 
Mangoes—to Stuff... ..... 29 “German Pickles Ta ge 
Mixed Pickle . wo". 3°". 3. 29. “Sttawberevaenced 32 
Pickling, Cabbage swe sales 29 
HINTS ON CANDY MAKING. 
Molasses Candy. . 4... . « . 32° A Delicatecintte Coniectionms 344 
Brown Sugar Candy. ... . 33 #Pasteforthefollowing Candies. 35 
Cocoanut Candy. 2... «+. 533, Creams Wala) em ie 36 
Marshmallow Paste ... . . 34 Coloring Candies 35 
Butter Scotch . .%47.i0. (. 3 2°34") ease Carey 35 
Cream ‘Candy ss 0°. 06.2.0. 33 0 A ee 36 
HOW TO MAKE ICE CREAM. 
Ice Cream, Philadelphia, <>, 37 | @@harlottess. ecco. 2s 41 
Banana Ice Cream. . . .. . 38 Charlotte Russe No.4. 41 
Chocolate Ice.Cream..%.).. 2937) | W nippedne came sae 42 
Tutti Fruit 4° 004. . Solseay ee GO ree ees (Delicious) . 42 
Peach Cream . . *. Jy dj. aus 39 voeebeliy an pene saree 42 
Strawberry Cream. ..... . 38 Prune Float (For Dessert) 43 
Pineapple Cream ....-.-. 39 Strawberry Float : 43 
Orange Ice. (os). eae ce, 2 9 Oe eee 44 
Heemon H.Ce ooo is «2 + + 139 >) PeacheMernnguies 43 
Variegated Ice Cream .. . . 38 Macedoine of Fruit ; 44 
range Delicaty'4. Gn 2% - » 40 Strawberry Blanc Mange. 44 
Judge Peter’s Pudding. . . . 40 Peach Blanc Mange . . 44 
Plain Charlotte Russe . . . . 40 Chocolate Blanc Mange 45 
Charlotte: Russe Noc2 mesos neat 
WINES, HOW TO MAKE, 

(onrrantsyy Ine, os ae . 45° Tomator wines 45 
BLOmMaAtO OO YrU Ls <i. a neae eee 45 Grape Wine... 46 
PIES “AND CUSTARDS: 

Fruit Pies and Pastry . . Ab. Crumb. Pie gn sae 48 
Pastry for Ordinary Fruit Pies. 46 Cocoanut Pie . 48 
Blackberry Pic (yw. ceee Ag sCustardi ieee 48 
Green Gooseberry Pie ... .*. 47  Superter Apple) Pies sean 48 
Raisin Pie . .... . ¢ 2.93 47. “Sliced Sweet: Potato:Pie 49 
Iremon Pie’. (2. :.) 6 so Se 47> SS weeterotato custarm 49 


INDEX, 


a7 
PRESERVES. 
PAGE, PAGE, 
Watermelon Rind Preserves . 50 Quince Preserves 51 
Breseoertescrves..’, . . .°. : 50 Fine Pear Preserves. . 51 
Peach Preserves No.2 ... 50 Goose Plum Preserves . ore 2 
Preserved Strawberries .. . 51 Green Grape Preserves. . . . 52 
MARMALADES AND SWEET PICKLES.” 
Peach Marmalade. ..... 53. #&Very fine Grape Sweet Pickle. 53 
Apple Marmalade. ..... 53 Sweet Cantaloupe Pickle. 54 
Strawberry Marmalade. . . . 53 Green Cucumber Sweet Pickle, 54 
PUDDINGS BOILED AND BAKED. 

Pudding, Roly Poly... . . . 55 French Rice Pudding 58 
Sauce for Roly Poly .. . 55. yA Delicate Tea.Dish’. 59 
Tapioca Pudding with Cocoanut 56 Canned Peaches for Tea 59 

Transparent Pudding ... . 56 Chocolate Cream poe gine 
Sauce tor Pudding .....-.. . 56 PColdtoriles wae erat. 59 
Brown Bettie... Sava 50. Combination Roly. Poly 60 
Sweet Potato Pudding ise 57 sponge’ Cake Puddins. 60 
Mucenmotmruddings,.. .. . +57 Rice Raisin Pudding. . .. .. 60 
Fairy Butter Sauce .. . 58 Cocoanut Custard Pudding. . 61 
Plum Pudding (Delicious) . 57. Strawberry Sauce for Pudding 61 
Bread Pudding with Cocoanut 59 Baked Apple Dumpling 61 
Plum Pudding No.2 ... . 58 Pineapple Pudding 62 
Sauce for Plum Pudding . . . 58 Souffle Pudding... 62 

CAKES AND CAKE MAKING. 

PreaanCr Cake dnt 06 Gee. 5 oy os 645 Caramel: Cake). 70 
Fruit Cake No.1 ... . - « 63 #£xWhite Layer Fruit Cake 70 
Vanderbilt Fruit Cais (Deli- Layer Cake Nor2. tos ETO 
CHOUG) seh ae as ea oe 04a lady: Cake*(Neversearis)s . 171 
Silver or Bride’s Cake aie ves aah | Nut Cake te fica ean aenrn 71 
PEO AKC ee ah Si ae) Lagi te ode 63 . Silver Layer Cake . 72 
Harlequin *Cake (Nice and White-Fruit Cake: phe 
Denier iimiasce solv ese apO4 me beuit, Cake: Nog ne 
Weei@ream Cake. i... ... + . 65 -Sponge Cake 72 
mtciiocolate Cake: . 0 6. sos) a 66 Silver Cake No.2. . i 
Wunite Cake: No...1 2. ¢ . <..66—° Lafayette Gingerbread (Fine) 73 
@peoanut Cakes... % 0...) 06. Cup Cake 74 
EOUbeMCAke J... %i5 ais ss 67. Cream Puffs . 74 
Maieelalies ets aes se 07") Ginger Snapse eat 74 
Delicate. Cake 4.5... .. « 68 - Confectioners’ Icing. 75 
Sponge Cake .........68 Icing a Cake ; nis 
Layer Cake. ....... . 68 Ornamenting a Cake . 76 
Angel Food - Se 5 60 ace: Léaves, Embossed Th 
White Sponge oak ereraetet 69 Cup Cake No.2. . 77 
Nugat Cake (Nugar). «. -.. 69 Lemon Filling for Cup Cake 77 


6 INDEX. 
PAGE. PAGE. 
Apples ahort, cake. a. 76. Frméappléeth oll (ice aes 70 
Strawberry Short Cake . 77. -PlainGake sec ~ 9 
Jumbles No. 1 : 78 Chocolate and Cocoanut Jum- 
Jumbles No. 2 78 bids 2, 78 
Jelly Rolls 79 Cocoanut Balls (For Fancy Dish) 79 
MISCELLANEOUS. 
Cream Sponge .’... «+ ,0« Ol. Borax, ands Pummetizeas sugar 
Cream for above 81 loT ASOMISh oases fa ates eee. 
Potatoe Au Gratin . 82... Hintssonsbl égleas eee er pe OO 
Pickled Nasturtions . St. Foros eee ee eae Rains. ©. 
eltuce saaladec pele a eel an 81° Porta Cougars. cee 
Cold Hominy Pudding. . 82... TosBreven ta velO cn are eens 
Summer Squash... . 82. StresCure tora hetonmae sens 
Mock Macaroni. . 82 Remedy for Chilblains. . .-. 95 
Corn for winter use 83 To Clean Furniture “: . gi 
CornsCoffee : ~: ; 83 To Remove Bruises from "Fur. 
Beautiful Pyramid of Fruit . 83 nittre a. SSE R he QI 
Novelty Dish . | Paty Kia? 84 Lamp Chimneys _ Bes gI 
Pineapple Jelly Seay . 5 04° Fo URemoyerine Yellow Coat 
Combination Blanc Mange . 84 from: Knit ang lesen. anol 
Pineapple Preserved . 85 Cement to Stop up Cracks in 
Pickled Cherries . 85 thé Hearth or Fireplace . . 92 
Nectar—A Temperance Drink, 86 To Mend Lamps which have 
Macaroni . > je Saas SO become Loosened in the 
Spanish Cream . 86 DSOCKEt YS [hi geteeue ee enue teks Om 
Jelly for Spanish Cream 87 To Take Ink Out of a Carpet. 92 
Sardine Sandwich . 87. To Draw Out Kerosene Oil from 
Egg Sandwich . . S37 a Carpeting. weer. ate monet 2 
What to do with Si ale Bread . 87 _. Usesvof- Saltese eerie eee Oe 
Spanish Fritters . 88. Walue of Salter es aye? 
Bell’s Biscuit : 83°. BedsBugs eee 93 
Mock Oyster Corn. . . 88 To Exterminate Red ay Black 
Cranberry Poultice for Erysipe- ALS iatreaes 2 Pai cd 93 
PEST ces oe ag ee ee 88 To Painta Floor Be . 94 
Never- Failing Choleta Cure 89 => Plush Garments—to Put Away, 904 
Infallible Catarrh Cure . 90 Labor Saving Soap .. . 93 


BREAD AND YEAST. 


LIQUID VEAST. 


Take handful of hops and some broken ginger, tie up in a 
cloth and boil to a strong tea; let stand to cool without strain- 
ing ; then stir in two tablespoonsful sugar and one of salt, and 
add yeast previously dissolved in warm water; bottle, after 
stirring in four boiled potatoes mashed; smooth with a silver 
fork ; shake well and set in the cellar if for summer use, or in 
the kitchen for winter. | : 

Set the rising for bread by making a stiff batter of the liquid 
and flour; set in a warm place to rise; in making the bread, 
make a hole in the center, pour in a little warm water and stir 
into a sponge; add one spoonful of lard, a little sugar, one egg 
and salt; stir well, then pour in the yeast, knead well and set to 


rise. 
AGN Bee Aces Y’Sey BASIE 


One handful hops, tied in a cloth, and boiled with six 
potatoes until they are done; just cover well with water. Take 
one quart flour and sift it, letting the water remain in kettle 
boiling until potatoes are peeled and mashed fine. Pour this 
boiling water on the flour, leaving the potatoes in the bottom of 
the crock; stir and beat. well while adding water to scald the 
flour well. Soak one cup of yeast, and when the batter gets 
cold, stir in the yeast and set in a warm place to rise until next 
morning ; stir yeast in late in the evening. In the morning it 
will be light; then stir in meal to make out in crumbs, Use in 
making bread two spoonsful yeast, soaked in warm water until 


(7) 


8 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


soft, then stir in flour for a thick batter and let rise to a sponge; 
use this quantity for two quarts flour, making in the same way 


as above. 
POCKET BOOKS. 


Two quarts sifted flour; one pint sweet, warm milk; one-half 
cup lard and butter mixed; one-half cup dissolved sweet yeast; 
one tablespoonful sugar ; little salt. Put the flour into a bowl, 
make a hole in the center; take a dish which holds a quart or 
more, into which put the warm milk, melted butter and lard, 
sugar and salt; stir this well together and pour in the center of 
the flour. Cover with a pan or cloth, and let stand until morning ; 
then mix well together, and set in a warm place until very 
light; knead it and roll out and cut with a glass; put piece of 
butter in the center of each roll, fold the edges together and put 
into pans to rise. When light, bake in a quick oven. 


QUICK BISCUIT ORsTEA®EOAE, 


Save from the baking a small piece of dough, size of an egg ; 
keep it in something close, or just drop in a tin of flour, so that 
it will not spread. Warm slightly a pint of milk, dissolve the 
dough in this, thicken with flour as thick as pound cake batter; 
add one tablespoonful lard, one of sugar, half teaspoonful salt ; 
set to rise. When very light, mold into biscuit, let rise again, 
then prick and bake them. Have the flour you use slightly 


warm. 
SHORT CAKE. 


One quart sifted flour; one pint thick, sour milk; one 
and a quarter teaspoonsful soda, one-third of salt; six ounces of 
lard and butter mixed. Put the flour into a bowl; put the milk 
in the center with the dissolved soda, which dissolve in a 
spoonful warm water; add butter and lard, salt, and stir to 
a cream with the hand; stir well before mixing in all of the 


BREAD AND YEAST. G 


flour; now mix all the flour quickly into a smooth mass; flour 
the board and roll out one-third of an inch thick. Cutin cakes 
and roll out in saucer shape and bake in a quick oven. Split 
and butter while hot, and pile one on the other. 


EXCELLENT BUNS. 


Two teacups of sugar, two-thirds cup butter, two eggs; 
beat these well together ; add one pint sweet milk and one good 
lively yeast cake softened by water, and flour sufficient to make 
a soft sponge. Set where it will keep warm. Next morning 
knead in more flour and let rise again, then mold into biscuits, 
and when light, bake in a moderate oven. 


s 


BREAKFAST ROLLS. 


Rub into a pound of flour half teacup of butter; add half 
teacup of sweet yeast softened in warm water, a little salt, and 
sufficient warm milk to make a stiff dough. Cover, and put in 
a warm place to rise, which will be light in two hours; then 
make into rolls. They will bake in a quick oven in fifteen 
minutes. 


LOAF CAKE THAT WILL KEEP A YEAR. 


One pound of risen dough, set in the morning; use no 
grease in mixing; mix as for bread. One pint of sugar, one 
half-pint each of lard and butter, one small cup molasses, two 
eggs. Mix lard and butter and sugar with the dough to a light 
cream with the hand; then add the eggs without beating and 
stir well; next the molasses; one teaspoonful powdered cinna- 
mon, one of cloves, one of allspice, one nutmeg. When well 
mixed, add quarter-pound seeded raisins, quarter-pound cur- 
rants, one-eighth pound citron, one whole lemon chopped fine ; 
dredge the fruit with four. If dough is not quite stiff enough, 


10 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


add flour to make it like fruit batter. Lastly, stir well into the 
batter one tablespoonful Royal baking powder. Set to rise for 
half-hour and bake in a well-heated oven one hour and.a half. 
This loaf must be baked in a cake-pan holding two pounds. 





MUFPFINS AND PANCAKES. 


POP OVERS. 


One pint sifted flour, one pint sweet milk, one tablespoonful 
of melted lard or butter, and a little salt; two eggs. Stir the 
‘flour into the milk and lard to a smooth batter. Beat eggs well 
and add to the mixture. Have the tins well greased and heated ; 
fill half full and bake twenty minutes in a quick oven. 


POTATO: PANCAKES: 


Twelve potatoes, three heaping tablespoonsful of flour, one 
teaspoonful baking powder, half teaspoonful salt, two eggs, two 
teacups boiling milk. Wash and peel the potatoes, grate them 
in water (which keeps them white), then drain off water and 
pour on them the boiling milk. Stir in eggs, salt and flour 
mixed with the baking powder, beat well and bake like any 
other batter cakes. 


FRENCH EGG TOASL 
One cup sweet milk; let it come to a boil and thicken with 
corn-starch and cook until thick as cream; put in a pinch of 
salt. Have prepared two hard-boiled eggs; chop the whites 
fine and stir in the sauce; grate the yelks. ‘Toast the bread a 
nice brown, dip quickly into hot water, lay on a dish and pour 


MEATS AND POT PIES. 3 


over each slice the sauce, and sprinkle with the grated egg. 
PNICe. 
WHEAT CAKES WITHOUT EGGS. 

One pint sour milk, one teaspoon soda, one tablespoonful 
melted butter, one and one-half pints of flour; salt. Mix by 
stirring the soda into the milk until it foams, then add the butter 
and flour, and last of all one tablespoonful of molasses. If you 
try them you will find them delicious. 





Perel SS) AUN ID POU PIES. 


BEE STEAK, SPANISH (STYLE: 


Lay a slice of round steak, rather more than an inch thick, 
on a pie-dish; add water enough to steam well and baste with, 
and bake thirty minutes. Take from the oven, and cover witha 
layer of sliced, chopped onion; put back into the oven until 
the onion is done; take out and cover with a layer of sliced 
tomatoes; set back until the tomatoes are done. Now sprinkle 
over all two tablespoonsful grated cheese and bits of butter, and 
let it brown. Attention must be paid to basting, and keep 
» covered while cooking. } 


BEEFSTEAK, MOCK DUCK. 

Take an inch thick slice of good round steak, in one large 
piece; make a dressing of bread crumbs, butter, pepper and 
salt, with two hard boiled eggs and a little onion chopped; the 
juice of one lemon; spread thick over the steak, roll up tight, 
bind with a thread and lay in a baking dish with sufficient 


12 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


water to cook done. Baste often, adding bits of butter. 
Serve for breakfast sliced like ordinary steak. 


ROAST BEEF. 


Parboil a good roast of beef until tender, then make deep 
incisions over it and fill with a nice dressing. Pour over the 
gravy with bits of butter, pepper and salt; dredge with flour 
and bake brown. 

| ' CHICKEN LAYER PIE. 

One cup cold, boiled rice ; one chicken stewed and cut fine ; 
one pint sliced tomatoes. ‘Take a pudding dish, line with layers 
of rice, chicken and tomatoes; butter, pepper and salt; continue 
in alternate layers until the dish is full; pour over the chicken 
gravy, dredge with flour and bake half an hour, 


CHICKEN PUDDING AND CORN. 


Cut up ‘to stew one good sized chicken; when tender, cut 
up fine; season with pepper, salt and butter. Turn this into a 
pudding dish, with one quart of grated corn, three eggs and one 
pint sweet milk ; lay on bits of butter, dredge with flour and 
bake until done. 

CHICKEN CREAMED. 


Cut up two spring chickens and stew until tender, adding 
pepper, salt and butter; just before serving turn over it one 
cup of cream, thickened with flour, a lump of butter and two 
sprigs of chopped parsley; let boil up once and turn into a 
tureen. 

MOLDED CHICKEN, 

Boil one or two good-sized fowls; strip from the bones and 
chop fine; reduce the chicken water to a cupful (leaving it to 
cook down after the chicken is done). Take the meat and 


MEATS AND POT PIES. 13 


season highly with mustard, celery seed, four hard boiled eggs, 
chopped fine, pepper, salt, and the juice of one lemon; pour 
over the broth and mix all together; put in a mold, turn over 
it a plate and put on a weight to press firm; slice cold for lunch 
or tea. 

BROILED CHICKEN. 

Take nice young fowls, split down the back and flatten with 
an iron; lay in a baking dish, butter well, sprinkle over flour, 
pepper and salt; then pour over it one cup and a half water and 
vinegar (mixed) ; cover with a dish, set into the oven and cook 
until tender; remove the cover and brown. 


FRIED CHICKEN. 


After dressing the chicken, wash it off nicely. Cut off the 
wings, thighs, and cut out the breast bone and divide into two 
pieces; cut the neck off and separate the back; throw into 
cold water and wash well through three waters. Now salt 
down and set aside until cold. Have a skillet ready on 
the fire with one good tablespoonful of lard; when hot, roll 
each piece of the chicken in flour, pepper it and lay in the 
skillet. Turn over a pan to cover, fry slowly until a light 
brown, turn over and brown the other side. If you wish 
gravy, put in a little water and bits of butter and a spoonful of 
cream after lifting the chicken. Toss about until brown and 
pour in a dish. 

SMOTHERED CHICKEN. 

Clean and wash two nice spring chickens, split them down 
the back and flatten the breast bone with a rolling pin, salt them 
and set away until cold. When you are ready to bake them, 
place in a skillet, sprinkle over pepper, bits of butter and 
dredge well with flour; pour into the skillet sufficient water to 


14 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


steam them done. Cover over and steam on top of the range. 
When quite tender, baste again with butter and flour and gravy ; 
uncover and set inside the oven and brown nicely. 


TO ROAST A TURKEY. 


Cut off the head and hang up to bleed well. Do not scald, 
pick dry nicely. Now draw out the craw and wash thoroughly 
clean. Do this the day before wanted. Salt down and put in 
a cool place. Give it one hour to boil in a large pot of water, 
if young. If two years old, a longer time will be required. 
Tuck the legs down where you have made an incision and tie 
together with a thread. When tender, make a nice dressing 
and fill the body; dredge with flour, butter, pepper and gravy, 
and roast brown in the oven. 


DRESSING FOR TURKEY OR ROAST CHICKEN. 


Take cold light bread and a corn dodger and crumble to- 
gether well. Season with pepper, salt, butter, three hard- 
boiled eggs crumbled, celery seed, and mix together dry. Use 
no water, this makes it heavy. Take up into balls, pressed to- 
gether, and fill the inside of the fowl, laying a good-sized ball 
outside the neck part; fill until plump and firm. If you wish 
to stuff with oysters, stew them first and mix with the dressing, 
half and half. 

TO BOIL A HAM. 

First cut off the hock firm and smooth, then wash and 
scrape well, cutting off any fragments. Place the ham in a, 
large tin boiler, cover weil with cold water, and boil steadily 
from four to five hours, according to the size. Turn over once 
or twice while boiling, try it with a fork and if tender all 
through, take off and leave in the water until cold. This 


MEATS AND POT PIES. {5 


keeps all grease from running out. Remove the outside skin 
and dot over with black pepper. 


TO BAKE A HAM. 

After boiling the ham in the usual way, and when quite 
cold, lay itina large pan. Beat up the yelks of three eggs, 
grate a pint of bread crumbs, brush over the ham with the 
yelks, sprinkle over the crumbs, pepper and salt. Another 
layer of egg and crumbs until an inch thick—egg on top of all 
—set into the oven and brown a few minutes, lay on a broad 
dish and garnish with sprigs of parsley. At the hock end lay 
under a nice bunch of bleached celery. 


; TO FRY HAM. 
_ Cut the slices thin from the thick side of the meat, trim off 
the edges and wash off. Lay the pieces into a broad skillet 
made quite hot and fry ‘slowly until brown on one side, then 
turn over and brown on the other. Now dish up ona meat 
dish and pour immediately into the skillet a little cold water, stir 
the grease and water together until a rich brown and pour over 
the ham in the dish. 
DELICIOUS FRIED HAM. 
Cut the slices thin, pour over them boiling water for a few 
minutes; now dredge each piece with flour and lay in the skillet, 
fry slowly until a nice brown on both sides. Have a cup half 
full of vinegar and one large tablespoonful of butter melted 
together on the stove. As soon as you lift the ham on a dish, 
pour over the sauce. 
TO BOIL SALT MACKEREL. 


Freshen the fish over night, laying it flesh side down in a 


large vessel of water. Next morning turn off the water and 








16 PRACTICAL OOOK BOOK. 


pour over fresh water; when ready to boil place in a vessel and 
cover well with cold water, boil steadily for twenty minutes, slip 
on a broad dish, cut off head and tail, lay them on the back, and 
pour overdrawn butter. Send to the table hot. 


TO STEW OYSTERS. 


Get the finest fresh oysters; drain off the liquor, leaving the 
oysters in a bowl or pitcher; put in a deep vessel the liquor, 
one quart to a gallon of milk according to the quantity of 
oysters you have; season with pepper, salt and butter ; roll the 
butter in flour first and drop into the boiling milk; when it 
boils drop in the oysters, and when shriveled lift out at once, 
pour into a deep covered tureen ; serve in bowls or soup dishes 
with crackers, pepper sauce and pickles, with coffee. 


ROAST DUCK. 


Select two nice canvas-back ducks, and pick and dress 
them nicely, cut an incision near the pope’s nose and draw out 
from the craw, wash clean and lay away in salt over night. If 
tender young fowls they need not be boiled; lay them in a 
deep pan with one pint of water, cover them closely and set 
inside a slow oven, and stew one hour; then take out and fill 
them plump with a nice turkey dressing with the addition of 
one chopped onion; baste well with the gravy, bits of butter, 
pepper and dredge with flour, set back uncovered into the oven 
and roast a nice rich brown. 


TO BROIL QUAILS. 
Pick the birds nicely without scalding, singe off the fine 
hair, split them down the back and flatten the breast bone. 
Have your griddle iron over a bed of hot coals; tie up a ~ 
good lump of butter and lard ina cloth and baste them often 


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MEATS AND POT PIES. lpg 


while broiling. When you first put them on turn down the 
breast part, turn over once or twice so as to get them well done 
on both sides; pepper them and pour over drawn butter. You 
can lay each bird on a slice of buttered toast if you like. This 
is a breakfast or tea dish. 


TO CLEAN FISH. 


Pour boiling water over the fish and see how nicely the 
scale will come off; split down the back, cut off head, fins and 
tail, wash well in three waters and salt away ready for use. 


FRIED FISH OF ANY KIND. 


Cut the pieces in squares, roll them in sifted meal, lay them 
in a pan of hot lard and fry a rich brown on both sides. 


, PEO PN SU HCA ICs 

Take a nice rump steak—do not wash it—trim off all the 
skin, lay it on a board and take a sharp bread knife and hack it 
on both sides well; have your skillet quite hot with two large 
tablespoonsful lard ; now dredge the pieces well with pepper and 
flour and lay them in the skillet, turn over a cover and fry a 
nice brown. Uncover and turn over the steak; when brown on 
both sides lift out on a dish and drop in a good piece of butter 
and little water, toss about until thick, and pour over the steak. 
Sprinkle salt after the steak is done. If done before it draws 
out the juice. 

POS Y Ovo LE RS: 

Select nice, large, fresh oysters, drain them through a colan- 
der. Have ready a panof beaten yelks of eggs, and rolled 
crackers; pepper and salt the oysters and dip each one first in 
egg then in cracker crumbs, then in sifted meal. Have the pan 


2 


18 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK, 


quite hot with a liberal quantity of lard, fill quite full, laying 
each one separate. Fry a nice, rich brown, lift with a spoon 
and cover over in a deep dish. 





S11 DEEDS ae. 


CROQUETTES—OF COLD MEATS. 

Cold beef, mutton or chicken, chopped fine; two hard 
boiled eggs, one cracker rolled; season with pepper, salt and 
butter ; mix well together with one raw egg into little balls, 
and bake in the oven. 


HOMINY CROQUETTES. 

A cupful of cold hominy, a tablespoonful melted butter; 
stir hard, moistening with a little milk; beat to a soft, light 
paste; add teaspoonful white sugar, and lastly, one well-beaten 
egg. Roll into balls with floured hands; dip in beaten eggs; 
roll in cracker crumbs and fry in lard. 


TOMATO, TOASTS 

Toast the bread; have a cup of stewed tomatoes; spread 

each slice with butter drawn, then with tomatoes; lastly, a cup 
of hot milk; cover inatureen. A breakfast dish. 


MINCED BEEF, 

Three, pounds of chopped raw beef, five. soda crackers 
rolled fine,-two eggs well beaten, pepper, salt, three slices 
chopped bacon, one-half cup milk; mix all well into a loaf; 
bake two hours slowly; cover over with a dish for half hour, 


pe Sh 


SIDE DISHES 19 


then remove and bake until done. This is sliced cold for lunch 
or tea. 
CHEESE STRAWS. 


Half pound sifted flour, quarter pound of butter, quarter 
pound grated cheese, salt, pinch mustard (cayenne pepper)—a 
Mittle. Mix well together and bind, with two raw eggs. If too 
dry add a little water; knead well and roll out to a quarter inch 
thick. Cut into strips like straws, five inches long; lay in 
baking-pan and brown delicately. 


FISH MUDDLE. 

Take any kind of fresh fish, cut in pieces about three inches 
long; sprinkle salt, red and black pepper on each piece; cover 
the bottom of an iron pot with small pieces of fat meat, put on 
a layer of fish, a layer of crackers or stale bread, a little chopped 
onion; alternate the layers, cover with water and boil until 
done. Fine. | 

SALMON AU GRATIN. 

One can salmon, one cup drawn butter, two tablespoons 
bread crumbs ; remove bones from the salmon, stir in the butter, 
season to taste; add juice of half lemon. Pour into a baking 
dish buttered, bake covered ten minutes, uncover and sprinkle 
bread crumbs on top and brown. Serve with sliced lemon. 
Very good. 

CHICKEN SALAD. 


Allow four good-sized boiled chickens for twenty people. 
Cut the meat fine. One quart chopped celery for this quantity,. 
one pint chopped pickle, eight hard-boiled eggs. Season first. 
the meat with pepper and salt, then add celery, pickle and 
whites of eggs chopped fine. Make the dressing next; mash 


smooth the yelks, melt half cup butter and stir the mustard into 


20 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


it; then add the smooth eggs and stir very light; then thin with 
good vinegar until as thick as cream, stirring all the time. Pour 
over the salad just before serving and mix well. Garnish with 
sliced pickle and egg. 


EGG SANDWICH. 
Six hard-boiled eggs—using the yellows only—minced fine. 


Butter slices of nice light bread, cover with the egg, seasoned, 
and grated ham. Fold two together. Nice for tea or lunch. 


VEGETABLES. 


STUFFED TOMATOES. 


Take round, smooth tomatoes, cut off the top and scoop out 
the inside; make a filling of bread crumbs; pepper and salt 
the inside meat and juice of tomato; stuff the tomato-cup full, 
lay on bits of butter on each cup; set in a dish, place in the 
oven and bake like apples. When done, remove each to a dish 
with a spoon, 

COLD TURNIP SALAD: 

Grate raw turnips, season with pepper, salt, celery seed 
and alittle vinegar. A nice relish for any kind of meat; similar 
to horseradish. 

CREAMED POTATOES. 

Slice, quarter of an inch thick, nice potatoes and throw 
them into water; take them out and put into a vessel with just 
water sufficient to cook tender; season with pepper and salt; 
just before serving, turn over them (after draining off all water), _ 
one cup cream thickened with flour rolled with a tablespoonful 


SWEET PICKLE AND SAUCES, 21 


butter, and boil up onceand serve. If parsley is liked, the flavor 
will be improved. 


| COLD SLAW. 

Cut the cabbage very fine, put into a bowl and season with 
salt, pepper and a good pinch of mistard; set in a cool place. 
Sauce: One cup vinegar, half teacupful sugar, a teaspoonful 
flour made smooth in a little water; let this boil until it begins 
to thicken; draw back and stir rapidly into the sauce the yelks 
of three eggs; after it begins to cool, mix with the cabbage. 
Slice hard-boiled eggs for garnishing. 


Sweet Pickle and Sauces. 


GREEN GRAPE SWEET PICKLE. 

Gather the grapes when half grown, pick from the stems, put 
them in slight salted water, let them stand covered twenty-four 
hours, pour off the salted water, and cover with fresh water, 
changing several times during the day. Put them next into 
strong alum water and boil gently until yellow, then turn them 
into clear boiling water, and take out and throw into clear 
water; weigh four pounds of fruit, two of sugar; spices to taste, 
vinegar to cover well; cook the fruit until clear in this syrup. 
Put into jars and tie up securely. 


PEAR SWEET, PICKLE. 
Take the pears and peel them, leaving on the stems; put 
them on in a kettle of water, and when it begins to boil, put in 
one teaspoonful of soda; cook in this soda water until tender ; 


22 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


take off and throw immediately into cold water. Now weigh 
seven pounds fruit, and four of sugar, one quart good vinegar, 
spices to taste, one lemon sliced; put on the fire and cook 
without breaking the fruit until soft ; boil syrup down and pour — 
over; seal up for further use. 


PEACH SWEET PICKLE. 


Weigh seven pounds of nice peeled peaches (yellow or white 
clings), four pounds of sugar, one pint of vinegar, spices to taste ; 
put all into a kettle and boil the fruit until soft enough to pierce 
with a straw ; put into the jar and boil syrup down thick; pour 
over and seal. 


GREEN TOMATO SWEET PICKLE. 


Gather the tomatoes; wash them and slice in quarter inch 
slices; soak two days in salt water and two in fresh, changing 
several times; weigh them, and for five pounds, two of white 
sugar; put the tomatoes, after soaking in fresh water, into a 
strong alum water and boil until green; change them into 
several clear boiling waters, then proceed to preserve them with 
the usual spices. 

CRANBERRY SAUCE. 


These proportions never fail. Three quarts of cranberries, 
two quarts white sugar, one quart of water; wash the berries 
and pick over carefully; put all together in a brass kettle and 
stew until a thick sauce, which will require an hour’s boiling. 
Put in jars and tie up tight. 


TOMATO. SAUCE. 
Pour boiling water over a gallon of tomatoes, slip off the 
skins, slice thin and boil until well cooked; mash through a 
colander; take the pulp and juice, weigh four pounds, two 


JELLIES AND JAMS AND CORDIALS. 2 


pounds sugar, one pint good vinegar, cloves, allspice, mace 
and cinnamon broken in small pieces; put on the fire and stew 
all down to a thick sauce. 


Jellies and Jams and Cordials. 


PRUNE JELLY. 

Prunes are easily digested and acceptable to a weak?stomach. 
Stew slowly two pounds of prunes in sufficient water to 
cover, and cook until soft; then drain out the fruit, leaving the 
syrup in the kettle; into the syrup put one cup white sugar and 
half box of gelatine (previously soaked). While this is sim- 
mering, stone the prunes, and return them to the kettle and 
simmer all together ten minutes, and pour into wet molds. 
When cold, set on ice; eat with cream. . 


APPLE JELLY. 
Wash and cut up the apples, about one peck; put into a 
kettle and cover well with water, and stew until well done; pour 
into a jelly bag and hang up to drip; do not squeeze. Measure 
. two quarts of juice, one quart white sugar, dissolve well; now 
put over the fire about one quart at a time, and ten minutes’ 
hard boiling will turn out nice, firm jelly. As soon as it hangs 
from the spoon, take off at once. 


BLACKBERRY JELLY. 


Gook the berries well, pour into a bag and drip well, squeez- 
ing well. One quart juice, one pound white sugar; dissolve 


D4 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


well; put on the fire and and boil steadily until it forms a thick 
jelly. | 
BLACKBERRY JAM: 

Pick over the berries, mash well through a colander, throw- 
ing away seeds and cores; weigh the pulp after mashing. To 
twelve pounds, three pounds of white sugar; put the pulp 
(without sugar) on the fire, and when it comes to a boil, stir 
well into it one teaspoonful soda and boil three quarters of an 
hour. Now add the sugar and stir through it well, and cook 
down thick and seal up. This keeps well, and is the finest 
of jam. 
BLACKBERRY CORDIAL. 

Boil the fruit and strain; for one gallon of juice, add two 
pounds broken loaf sugar, allspice and cloves, whole; boil all 
for three quarters of an hour; take off, and when cool, add one 
pint of good brandy; bottle and seal. 


STRAWBERRY CORDIAL. 


Pick the fruit over, put into preserving kettle and boil until 
the juice is well extracted; take off and strain through jelly bag. 
For two quarts juice, allow one pound loaf sugar; use allspice 
and cinnamon for flavoring; boil half hour. When cool, add 
one pint good brandy. 


VARIOUS SIDE DISHES. 


hS 
Or 


VARIOUS SIDE DISHES. 


CHEESE OMELET. 
This is a nice supper dish. Butter the bottom and sides of 
a pudding dish, and cover the bottom with thin slices of good 
cheese ; on this put a layer of broken crackers, and season with 
salt, pepper and butter; alternate these layers, When ready 
for the oven, pour over all a cup of sweet milk, or enough to 
nearly cover the whole. Bake until a light brown, and serve 
hot. 
POACHED: EGGS. 


To poach eggs nicely, lay muffin rings in a spider of hot 
water, which has been salted; break each egg ina saucer and 
slip into the rings as you break one. Lift them out with a spoon 
or turn over the pan in your dish. x 


2 GREEN CORN PANCAKES. 


Take five ears of corn and grate into a crock, saving all the 
milk from the cob; add two eggs, one cup sour milk, one-half 
teaspoon soda (dissolved), flour enough to thicken to the consist- 
ency of batter cakes, Salt; fry in lard. 


CHARLOTTE. RUSSE. 


~One-fourth box of gelatine; cup of cold water. Line a mold 
with thin slices of sponge cake. Whip one pint of thick, sweet 
cream, and when stiff beat in half cup pulverized sugar and one 
teaspoonful vanilla; dissolve the gelatine, which has been soak- 
ing, in one-fourth cup boiling water; pour this into the cream 
and stir from the bottom until thick and well mixed; pour this 


26 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK, 


mixture into the cake-lined mold, and set on ice several hours. 
If for tea, make early in the morning; if for dinner, prepare the 
night before. 

BUCKWHEAT CAKES. 

Set a batter the night before, according to the size of the 
family. Use one cake of yeast (previously soaked), one table- 
spoon of molasses, one teaspoon salt. Set to rise in a crock; 
add when mixing one handful meal and warm water; beat into 
batter in the morning two eggs and one teaspoonful baking pow- 
der just before frying. Light and nice. (Buckwheat one quart. ) 


OVSTERSPIE 


Line a buttered baking-dish with nice pastry or broken 
crackers, and place on it a layer of fine oysters. Rub two 
tablespoonsful of butter smooth with as much flour, and place ~ 
small bits over the oysters. Sprinkle with pepper and salt ; 
follow this with another layer of oysters, dotted with butter and 
seasoned as before; pour in enough liquor to nearly cover, and 
lay on top a nice pastry. Bake until a delicate brown; rub 
over with a little butter and serve hot. 


ORANGE FLOAT. 


One quart of water, the juice and pulp of two lemons, one 
cup of sugar. Let this come to a boil, and put in four table- 
spoonsful corn starch dissolved in milk. Stir it continually 
until it boils ten or fifteen minutes. Take off, and when cold, 
pour over four or five oranges that have been sliced thin, and 
put the beaten whites, flavored with sugar and vanilla, on top. 


LEMON SAUCE. 


Yelks of two eggs, one tablespoonful corn starch, one table- 
spoonful of butter, two tablespoonsful of sugar, three-quarters of 





VAKLOUS SIDE DISHES. QT. 


a pint of boiling water, the grated rind and juice of one lemon; 
beat the eggs, corn starch, sugar and butter together; add the 
boiling water and stir over the fire until thick. Take it from the 
fire and add lemon juice and rind. 


BERRY TART. 


Sprinkle the bottom of a pie-pan with sugar and a little flour 
(thickly) ; then a layer of cranberries sprinkled with sugar, or, if 
sauce is used, omit the sugar; add a little water and cover with 
a nice pie-crust. When done, turn a plate over the top of the 
pie and whip it over quickly; the pie-crust will be on the plate, 
crust under, and berries on top. Make an icing as you would 
for cake, spread over the cranberries, and set in the oven to 
harden. It is very nice. 


WHAT A LEMON WILL DO. 

The next time you think you have done with a lemon, just 
dip it in salt and rub your copper kettle or stewpan. . You will 
be surprised to find what a brilliant surface you obtain, if you 
rub instantly with a dry cloth. You can polish all brass-work 
by the same means, every stain disappearing as if by magic. 

If boiled where the odor of fish or onions remains ina kettle, 
it will remove it at once. 


28 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


PICKLES AN DeeAwi Sea: 


CUCUMBER PICKLES. 

Get about two hundred small cucumbers; put them in a 
stone jar; put over them one pound of coarse salt; pour boil- 
ing water on them, enough to cover well. Let them stand 
twenty-four hours; pour off and reheat and pour over again; 
do this three mornings. The fourth morning drain off the brine 
and cover with pure boiling water; let stand twenty-four hours ; 
if not then filled out plump, cover again with boiling water. 
When plump, place in the jar they are to be kept, and as you 
pack them, place in the jar little bags of spice, cloves, cinnamon 
and mustard seed; half box of Coleman’s mustard, dissolved 
and boiled in the vinegar. Soak about six green peppers with 
the cucumbers and half dozen garlic buttons. Put into the 
vinegar (just sufficient to cover well) a piece of alum, broken, 
about the size of half an egg; boil until alum is dissolved, and 
pour hot over the pickles; cover tight. They will keep two 
years. ‘To insure pickles keeping perfectly, reboil the vinegar 
two or three mornings, , 


SLICED. CUCUMBER: PIGKine: 


Three dozen good-sized cucumbers, just fit for table use; 
two onions sliced. Slice cucumbers and onions; put a sprinkle 
of salt on each layer into a jar. Next morning pour into a bag 
and drip for two or three hours. Use one-eighth pound white 
mustard seed, one-eighth of black, one tablespoonful celery 
seed, one root of scraped or grated horseradish, also sprinkling 


PICKLES AND CATSUPS. 29 


of black pepper, two red or two green peppers. Cover all with 
cold, strong vinegar. After filling the jar, stir all ingredients 
gently. Tie up close. Equal to fresh cucumbers. 


MANGOES—TO STUFF. 


To stuff one dozen mangoes: Take one cup each of white 
and black mustard seed, one handful horseradish, one table- 
spoonful each of cloves, mace, cinnamon, black pepper, celery 
seed, and one cup of sugar; mince a small head of cabbage 
fine, pour hot vinegar over it and let it stand one hour, then 
drain off, and when cold put the mixture together, adding small 
- beans and cucumbers, and fill the mangoes. Sew up and place 
them in the kettle (seam up), and scald gently with vinegar. 
Pour into the jar and tie up securely. 


MIXED PICKLES. 


One-quarter peck string beans broken in inch pieces, one 
quart Lima beans, one pint small white onions, six ears of green 
corn cut off the cob, three dozen small cucumbers, half pound 
sugar, three red peppers without seed, three green peppers 
without seed, one half gallon vinegar, one half box of Colman’s 
mustard, one tablespoon of salt. Boil three pints of vinegar and 
sugar.together, add the dissolved mustard in the remaining pint, 
then put all together on the fire. Add the ingredients sepa- 
rately, as some will cook quicker than others. Cut the cucum- 
bers in half, and chop peppers. When all are done seal up; 


you will like it. 
PICKLING CABBAGE. 


Cut the cabbage in quarters, pack them down closely in a 
jar, and to every gallon put in a tablespoon each of allspice and 
mustard seed tied in a bag. Take vinegar enough to cover 
the whole, heat it scalding hot, but do not boil it; pour over the 


30 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


cabbage hot, and tie up tight. When cold, pour off the vinegar 

and reheat, and do this until you have put it on ninetimes. Do 

not use cloves, it turns the cabbage dark. You can add a little 

sugar if you like. 
CUCUMBER PICKLES. 

Take four gallons small cucumbers, put them on in a brass 
kettle with vinegar to cover, let them boil a few minutes and 
take off; put in a jar with the vinegar and let them stand two 
days. Then take one pint vinegar, four pounds sugar, four 
tablespoons spice, one of black pepper, three of ground mus- 
tard, two pods red pepper, four or five garlic buttons; boil all 
fifteen minutes, then pour into a jar with fresh vinegar over the 
_ pickles. Ready for use in two days. 


CHOW-CHOW. 


One peck chopped cabbage, one-half peck chopped cucum- 
bers, one-third green tomatoes, one-third onions, two or three 
dozen large green peppers. Place in a jar, layer mixture, a 
handful of salt alternately, and let stand over night. Next 
morning squeeze out dry, all water;. put in ten cents celery 
seed, five cents white mustard seed, two-thirds small box mus- 
tard, half of five cents tumeric powder, cup and half sugar, 
black pepper, horseradish, two-thirds small size bottle of olive 
oil. Cover all with vinegar. Put on a slow fire and let come to 
a boil. Stir all the time, and take off soon as it boils. Pack 
away in stone jars. Watch and keep covered with vinegar. 
The ingredients soak up the vinegar in several hours. Excellent. 


VIRGINIA MIXED PICKLES. 
One-half peck green tomatoes cut into quarters, twenty-five 
medium-sized cucumbers unpeeled and cut in small pieces, 
fifteen onions, small; four heads of cabbage cut in small pieces, 


PICKLES AND CATSUPS. ok 


one pint grated horseradish, one-half pound white mustard 
seed, one-quarter pound ground mustard, one-half cup ground 
black pepper, one half-pint salad oil, one ounce celery seed, 
one-half ounce ground cinnamon, two ounces tumeric powder. 
Mix the vegetables all thoroughly, using sprinklings of salt; “let 
stand twenty-four hours, drain off all juice and pour on 
vinegar and water—half and half; now let stand a day or two, 
strain again as dry as possible. Mix spices well, except ground 
"mustard. Now boil one gallon and a half vinegar and pour, 
boiling hot, over the pickles; do this three successive mornings, 
using same vinegar; the third time two pounds sugar to the 
vinegar, pouring over hot as before; last, mix oil and mustard 
with a small portion of vinegar. Add this when cold. 


GERMAN PICKLES. 


_ A fine relish with meats. Take one gallon of green tomatoes, 
one-third small onions. Cut them in thin slices, sprinkle with 
salt and pour into a bag to drain twelve hours. Squeeze out 
dry. Half cupful broken ginger, black pepper and allspice, 
cloves and cinnamon; all of these must be crushed, but not 
ground ; put them with four pounds sugar, in layers, in a kettle 
with the pickle. Add vinegar to cover, and boil a short time. 
Seal up in jars. 

TOMATO CATSUP. 

It will keep as long as there is any to keep. One peck of 
ripe tomatoes; one ounce each of salt and mace; one table- 
spoonful each of black pepper, cayenne and cloves; seven 
tablespoons of mustard ; one tablespoonful celery seed tied in a 
bag. Cut up the tomatoes, put them in a kettle, boil until the 
juice is extracted and the pulp dissolved; strain and press 
through a colander, then through a sieve. Return to the fire, 


on PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


add the seasoning, boil four hours; stir often the last hour; put 
in a stone jar and let stand two hours; when cold, adda pint 
of strong vinegar; take out the celery bag, and bottle. It is not 
necessary to seal up; cork tightly and keep in a cool place. 


STRAWBERRY ACID. 


Dissolve five ounces of tartaric acid in two quarts of water, 
and pour over twelve pounds of strawberries, in a porcelain 
kettle. Let it simmer forty-eight hours. Strain it, taking care 
not to bruise the fruit. To every pint of the juice add one and 
a half pounds of sugar, and stir until dissolved; then set away 
for a few days. Bottle and cork tightly, Ifa slight fermentation 
takes place, leave the corks out a few days, then cork, seal, 
and keep the bottles in a cool place. 


CANDY MAKING. 


There are few more enjoyable and inspiriting pleasures for 
the young, looking for sport indoors, than to get into a clean 
kitchen with a brisk fire and have a genuine old-fashioned 
‘*candy pull.” 


7 


MOLASSES CANDY. 


Put two quarts of real molasses, the best quality—not the 
syrup—into a bright saucepan and boil moderately, stirring 
briskly until it is sufficiently thickened, until when a little is 
dropped into cold water it immediately becomes hard and brittle; 
then stir into it one teaspoonful of cream of tartar and simmer ten 
minutes longer. This makes it whiteand tender. Then remove 
from the fire and stir in any flavoring liked, orange peel grated, 


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CANDY MAKING. 30 


vanilla; now pour the whole into a buttered flat dish, and put in 
a cold place till it is of a proper consistency to be handled. Now 
butter the hands, and with two persons, draw out the mass and 
fold over and pull again, and repeat until it is very light in 
color and smooth. Lastly draw out and cut into sticks, and lay 
them on a buttered dish. 


BROWN SUGAR CANDY. 


Put into a saucepan six cups of good brown sugar (gran- 
ulated is nicer), one cup vinegar, one cup hot water, one large 
spoonful of butter, one teaspoonful carbonate of soda dissolved 
in. a little hot water. Boil all these ingredients together (mod- 
erately) for forty minutes, stirring occasionally. Add a large 
spoonful of vanilla; test by dropping a small quantity in cold 
water. When brittle, take off and pour into a buttered plate. 
Do not, on any account, scrape the contents of the kettle. 


COCOANUT BALLS. 


Grate the meat of one cocoanut, add to it one quart of sifted 
powdered sugar, the frothed white of two eggs, and the milk 
from the nut. Mix all well together and make into little balls 
with the hands. In a short time these will be dry and firm 
enough to eat. They are easily made and require no fire. 


; GREAM CANDY: 

The very finest is made by using confectioner’s sugar in the 
proportion of two large cupfuls to six spoonsful of boiling water. 
Put into a porcelain kettle and dissolve slowly, stirring often; 
then boil briskly until it will crisp in water ; then add one spoon- 
ful extract of vanilla and one heaping teaspoonful cream of 
tartar. Pour intoa buttered pan, and when partly hardened and 
cool enough to handle, pull it and work it like the old-fashioned 


3 


34 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK, 


molasses candy until it is perfectly white. Cut in long strips 
and set aside in a cool place. 


BUTTER SCOTCH. 


Boil together for thirty minutes one cup molasses and two 
cups of sugar, three spoonsful butter and one full teaspoonful 
soda. When done, stir in any flavor desired; pour upon well 
buttered plates. When cold, square off. 


MARSHMALLOW PASTE. 


Take the purest gum arabic and dissolve one pound of it in 
one quart of warm water. Then add one pound of confec- 
tioner’s sugar and put over the fire, stirring constantly, until all 
is dissolved and smooth as honey. Then gradually, one by one, 
‘stir in the whites of eight eggs beaten to a froth. Stir and sim- 
mer till the mass becomes thinner and will not adhere to the 
finger ; stir in any flavor desired and pour into a box or dish 
‘slightly powdered with corn-starch. When cool, divide into 
.small squares. 


A DELICATE LITTLE CONFECTION. 


Beat the whites of two eggs to a stiff froth and stir in as 
much confectioner’s sugar as it will possibly absorb, and add 
vanilla extract. With the hands knead and mold in a mass as 
you would bread, using dry sugar as is required instead of flour, 
So as to handle well. When it no longer inclines to crumble, it 
is ready to make into shapes. Break off little pieces and form 
them about the size of a quarter of a dollar and twice as thick. 
Have ready some nuts of various kinds and stick one on each 
side of the sugar ball. _ Press it in so as to adhere and lay care- 
fully aside to cool. You can use also dates, figs, raisins and 
cocoanut. Melt some chocolate and dip the little balls while 


CANDY MAKING. 35 


warm into the chocolate mixture. Insert them on a knitting 
needle. ; 
PASTE FOR THE FOLLOWING CANDIES. 

Two pounds confectioner’s sugar. Put some of the sugar 
in a bowl, add very little cold water; work with the hands, as 
you can tell the right consistency better in this way. When 
smooth, take small quantity and roll in conical shapes; grate 
Baker’s chocolate and melt; then take up the sugar drops, insert 
a knitting needle in the top, dip in the melted chocolate flavored 
with vanilla until well covered. Then set them away on a 
greased plate to cool. 


HICKORYNUT, COCOANUT AND RAISIN BARS. 

Chop the hickorynut meats fine, roll into this paste, mix 
well and flatten on a plate; smooth with a knife and cut into 
bars. Cocoanut and raisins can be used in the same way. 
Take the meats of almonds, roll some paste around them and 
dip in granulated sugar, and you have nice cream almonds. 
Brazil nuts are used in the same way. 


SAUSAGE CANDY. 

Make this by mixing all kinds of chopped nuts, raisins, 
currants and bits of citron with the paste. Do not make too 
dry or stiff. Itis very good. ‘‘ Practice makes perfect”’ in the 
art of candy-making. When you get your candy done, put in 
a large platter and see how nice it looks. 


-” 


COLORING CANDIES. 
For coloring brown, grate a little chocolate into the dry 
sugar. For yellow, grate the outside peel of fresh orange. 
When this is used, it gives the flavor desired. For pink, a pink 


36 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


sugar, which can be had at the druggist’s or confectioner’s. A 
pretty candy is to take two colors of paste, pink and white; 
press together, not mix, and cut in small squares. | 


CREAM WALNUTS. 


Take a small amount of the paste, roll into little balls, then 
press the meats of English walnuts on either side. Cream dates 
and figs are made the same way. Dip all in the granulated 
sugar. . 


CREAMS AND ICES. 


LEMON BUTTER. 


The juice and grated rind of three lemons, three eggs, one- 
half pound granulated sugar, one-third pound good butter; melt 
the butter (setting the vessel in a pan of hot water), put in the 
lemon, beat together the yelks of the eggs and sugar; stir into 
the lemon juice and butter until it thickens like boiled custard ; 
have the whites beaten ready, and stir in when done; nice to 
spread on cake. | 


HOW TO MAKE ICE CREAM. 


A patent freezer, of course, is best in which to make ice 
cream; but if you do not happen to have one, a deep can 
about four inches in diameter with a tight cover, placed in the 
center of a firkin, with ice and salt packed around it, will make 
a good substitute. It will be necessary to remove the cover as 
you freeze and scrape down the sides with a broad knife or 
spoon, With any kind of freezer, the essential points are to 
have the ice finely pounded or crushed; to use right pro- 


CREAMS AND ICES. oF 


portions of rock salt, and beat the cream thoroughly while 
freezing. 
ICE CREAM—PHILADELPHIA. 


Two quarts pure cream (if thick, add one pint of milk), two 
cups sugar, two tablespoonsful vanilla; scald the cream, melt 
the sugar in it, and flavor when cool. The cream should be 
very sweet and well flavored, as both are lessened by freezing ; 
while the cream is cooling, pack the freezer; put in a layer of 
ice three inches deep, pack solid; then a layer of coarse salt, 
about three-fourths of an inch thick, then more layers of ice 
and salt till it comes nearly to the top. Be carefui not to let. 
any of the salt into the can; when all is ready, pour the cream 
into the freezer. In freezing, turn slowly at first, but after ten 
minutes turn more rapidly till it becomes hard to turn; this 
usually takes half an hour; then remove the beater and scrape 
down the cream, pack it away in ice until wanted. 


ICE CREAM. 

Put on the fire two quarts of milk; stir together one-half 
pound sugar, the yelks of four eggs; one heaping tablespoonful 
corn-starch, until light. When the milk boils, dip out by 
cupfuls and stir into the eggs and sugar. When about half has 
been dipped out, pour all back into what remains in the kettle 
and stir, and cook until it thickens. When cold, pour into the 
- freezer and freeze. 

CHOCOLATE CREAM. 

Three quarts of pure cream; one and a half pints sugar; 
one gill of boiling water; half pound of Mallard’s or other 
sweetened chocolate. Break up the chocolate into small pieces, 
put it in a small saucepan with the water and stir it over a slow 
fire until dissolved and smooth; add by degrees a pint of the 


38 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


cream, then the sugar, and when well mixed the rest of 
the cream, and strain into the freezer. 


BANANA ICE CREAM. 


Four pints of milk; four eggs; one cup of sugar; one table- 
spoon corn-starch; one dozen bananas mashed; juice of two 
lemons. Cook the custard. When cold, add bananas and 
freeze. 

TUTTI FRUIT. 


A rich vanilla flavored cream (about two quarts), sweetened 
to taste. Putin the freezer, and when it thickens, stir gently 
through it candied cherries, raisins, citron and nuts, if liked, and 
continue the freezing until solid. 


PEACH CREAM. 


Select freestone peaches, quite ripe; peel and mash through a 
colander to apulp; then sweeten quite sweet; now add to every 
pint of fruit, one pint of cream. If cream is very rich, you 
can add one pint of milk. This is very rich. 


STRAWBERRY CREAM. 


Crush two quarts of strawberries with two pounds of sugar; 
let them stand an hour or more; squeeze them through a cloth, 
pressing out all the juice. Add to the juice an equal measure of 
water, and when half frozen, stir in the whisked whites of two 
eggs. 

VARIEGATED ICE CREAM. 

One quart of chocolate cream, one quart of vanilla cream, 
one quart of strawberry cream. Put the vanilla cream into the 
freezer first, freeze until quite thick; remove the lid and put on 
the strawberry cream, and freeze; remove the lid and put on 


CREAMS AND ICES. 39 


the chocolate cream, and freeze. Pack and set it away; when 
wanted take out the freezer, wrap a hot cloth around it, loosen 
the inside by cutting around with a broad knife, and turn out 
on a flat dish. Cut into slices, like cake, when serving. 


PINEAPPLE CREAM. 


You can use the grated pineapple, or fresh fruit grated. 
Make after the above rule. 


ORANGE ICE. 
Grate the outside of four oranges, and steep it ten minutes in 
a pint of warm water; strain this water on a pound of sugar; 
add a pint of orange juice, and when cold, pour into the freezer 
and freeze. When half frozen, stir through the cream the whites 
of four eggs whipped to a stiff froth. 


LEMON ICE. 

Cut up into thin slices two dozen lemons; then add one gal- 
lon of water and sweeten to taste; squeeze all through a bag, 
pressing out the juice after standing three or four hours. Put 
into the freezer, adding whites of four eggs beaten stiff when 
half frozen, 


40 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK, 


PINE DSS 


ORANGE DELICACY—FOR TEA. 


Peel and slice six or eight nice Florida oranges, removing 
every particle of white skin, and cut the pulp into small pieces. 
Place them in a glass bowl and sprinkle over sugar on each 
layer. Make beforehand a soft custard of one pint milk, yelks 
of three eggs, sugar to sweeten. Use the grated peel of three 
oranges for the flavoring for the custard, boiling it with the 
milk. After the custard gets cold, pour it over the sliced 
oranges. Then take the whites, beat to a stiff froth, beat in one 
or two tablespoonsful sugar, and put this on top of custard. 
Do not stir. Have some nice cream ready to serve with each 
saucer, 

JUDGE PETER’S PUDDING. 


Three-fourths box of gelatine, two oranges, two lemons, two 
bananas, six figs, ten English walnuts. Dissolve the gelatine in 
half pint cold water, let stand until soft, then add one pint 
boiling water. Cut up the lemons, and after squeezing out the 
juice put them in (with one cup of sugar) with the dissolved 
gelatine. Let it stand a short while and strain, then let it alone 
until it begins to thicken. Now stir all the fruit in, cut into 
small pieces. Turn into a dish or mold. When firm, serve 
it with whipped cream. Delightful. 


PLAIN CHARLOTTE RUSSE. 

Put a pint of milk into your custard kettle, sweeten and 
flavor ; when hot add three tablespoonsful corn-starch dissolved 
in a little cold milk. Have ready a buttered pudding-dish and 


FINE DESSERTS. 41 


pour this custard in it when quite thick, and set away to cool. 
Put on another pint of milk, sweetened, and a small lump of 
butter; add the well-beaten yelks of three eggs, and one and 
one half tablespoonsful corn-starch wet with cold milk. When 
it thickens, and the other part is cold, dip by spoonsful and put 
this on top of the white custard. Now beat up the whites of the 
three eggs, with a little sugar; spread this on top of all, and set 
in the oven a few minutes to brown slightly. Serve for tea with 
cream sweetened and flavored with vanilla. 


CHARLOTTE RUSSE No. 2. 

Dissolve an ounce of gelatine in a little hot water (enough to 
cover well), strain it, and when nearly cold stir into it a pint of 
rich cream, well beaten, sweetened and flavored with vanilla. 
Add last, whites of six eggs whipped toastiff froth, Pour into 
a dish lined with sponge cake. | 


CHARLOTTE RUSSE No. 3. 

Yelks and whites of four eggs beaten together well, half 
pound sugar, one quart of rich cream frothed in a syllabub 
churn. Put the froth in a sieve, and let it drip as it rises; stir 
this stiff froth into the sugar and eggs; stir into this half box of 
gelatine previously dissolved, and flavor all with vanilla. 


GHARLOLTERVoSsH No.4, 

One ounce of gelatine dissolved in two gills of boiling milk, 
whites of four eggs beaten to a stiff froth, one cup and 4 half 
white sugar, one pint of thick cream whipped to a stiff froth and 
flavored with vanilla. Line a mold with slices of sponge cake. 
- Mix gelatine, sugar, cream and flavoring; add last the frothed 
whites, very lightly. Pour into the mold, and set on ice until 


wanted, 


42 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


WHIPPED CREAM. 


One and one-half pints good rich cream, sweetened and 
flavored with vanilla. Dissolve three-fourths ounce gelatine 
in a cup of hot water, and when cool pour into the cream; 
stir well, and set on ice or in a cool place. 


FRUIT DELICACY—DELICIOUS. 


Eight bananas, grated; one can grated pineapple, six well 
flavored apples, grated; the juice and pulp of one dozen 
oranges. Mix all together, and sweeten to taste with pulver- 
ized sugar. Use nice, juicy oranges. Prepare the orange cups. 
in this way: Cut off a small piece from the top, and scrape out 
with a spoon all the juice and pulp; mix this with the other 
fruit. Strip out the white skin from the inside of the orange 
until you have a transparent cup. Now lay each cup on a glass 
saucer, with a green lemon or orange leaf under it; fill each 
cup with the fruit mixture and serve with a teaspoon. A 
supper dish. 

As PRETTY SUPPER DISH: 


Take one box of Chalmer’s or Cox’s gelatine and pour over 
water (cold) to cover well; when soaked for several hours put 
in two cups of sugar and the juice of four lemons; then pour 
over two pints of boiling water and stir until well dissolved ; 
then strain through a sieve or cloth. Divide this into three 
parts in separate bowls. Color one part pink with any kind of 
juice from preserves, fruit juice or red jelly—a pretty pink ; 
leave one pure white. The other part stir in cut oranges, 
bananas or candied fruit. Now set each aside to cool. Have 
ready a broad, flat dish; set in the middle of this a small oval 
deep dish. Just before the jelly congeals, so as not to run 
together, put the pink part around the small dish; then around 


FINE DESSERTS, 43. 


this pour the part with the fruit; last, the white around this. 
This fills the outside of the flat dish. When firm, take out the 
small dish from the center and pour in a pint of thick whipped 
cream. Serve on saucers in slices, with a spoonful of the cream: 
(flavored with vanilla and sweetened) on top of each slice. 


PRUNE FLOAT—FOR DESSERT. 

Stew a pound of nice prunes in water sufficient to cover 
well, and one cup sugar. When soft, take out to cool and 
remove the stones; put in a deep pan. Whip the whites of 
six eggs to a stiff froth with a little sugar; stir well into the 
prunes and set into the oven ten minutes to get a pale brown.. 
Whip a pint of rich cream, and when cool serve in saucers with: 
the cream put over. 

STRAWBERRY FLOAT. 

Beat the whites of six eggs stiff, adding sugar as you beat 
until it hangs from the spoon. Beat long and hard, then take 
a cup of strawberry preserves or jelly and beat into this, one 
spoonful at a time, until so stiff you can raise it up high and it 
will not drop from the spoon. Turn all into a glass bowl and 
serve with sweetened cream. ‘The art lies in the beating to 
make a smooth, glossy float. You can make all kinds of floats. 
in this way, using a variety of jellies or preserves. 


PEACH MERINGUE. 


Put a quart of milk (reserving half a cupful) in a saucepan,. 
and when it boils add the reserved milk into which two table- 
spoonsful corn-starch are dissolved. Stir constantly until it 
thickens. Remove from the fire and add one tablespoonful’ 
butter, and let it get cold. When cold, beat in the yelks of three: 
eggs until it is light, and add half cup granulated sugar. Cover 


44 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


‘the bottom of an earthen baking-dish with three layers of ripe 
peaches peeled, stoned and quartered, sprinkling two table- 
spoons sugar over them. Pour the custard gently over the fruit 
and bake in a quick oven twenty minutes. When done cover 
the top with the whites beaten stiff with a little sugar. Brown 
‘delicately in the oven and serve cold with cream. 


SNOW PUDDING. 

Make a quart of gelatine, using one box of gelatine, two 
cups sugar, four lemons, the whites of five eggs. When nearly 
congealed beat into the gelatine the stiff beaten whites; beat 
thoroughly. Make a nice, soft custard of the yelks and serve 
with the gelatine. } 

MACEDOINE OF FRUIT. 

Wine jelly and fruit in alternate layers frozen together ; 
the fruit may be of any and all sorts, and may be candied, 
preserved. The mold must be filled after the jelly has begun 
to form, but before it is stiff, and the first layer should be jelly ; 
when filled place the mold in salt and ice prepared as for 
freezing ice cream ; cover closely and let it stand several hours 
‘before serving. 

PEACH BLANC MANGE. 

Boil one pint milk sweetened with white sugar, thicken with 
corn-starch enough to make it quite solid; as it cools, add one 
pint of cut up peaches made very sweet with sugar, and put into 
a mold; turn it out on a dish, and eat with cream or soft 
custard. The fruit must be freestone peaches. 


STRAWBERRY BLANC MANGE. 


Stew nice, ripe strawberries, strain off the juice and sweeten 
to taste ; place the juice over the fire and when it boils stir in 


WINES—HOW TO MAKE. 45. 


two tablespoonsful corn-starch made smooth in water; allow this. 
quantity for every pint of juice; stir constantly until thick, pour 
iato molds wet in cold water, and set away to cool; serve with 
cream and sugar, and a spoonful of fresh strawberries if 
desired. This makes a very pretty and delicious dessert. 


CHOCOLATE BLANC MANGE. 


_ Half box of gelatine ; soak in as muchcold water as to cover 
well. Four ounces sweet chocolate grated; one quart sweet 
milk; one cup sugar. Boil milk, chocolate and sugar five 
minutes; add gelatine and boil five minutes longer, stirring all 
the time ; flavor with vanilla when cool and eat with cream. 





WINES—HOW TO MAKE. 


CURRANT WINE. 

To one quart of juice add two quarts of water, and to each 
quart of this mixture add one pound of white sugar ; stir 1t well 
and let stand a week. Put over the jug a netting to keep out 
gnats and flies. After standing a week, strain and bottle. 
Ready for use in five or six months. Equal to champagne. 


TOMATO WINE. 


Three pounds of white sugar to one gallon of juice. Allow it 
to ferment four or five days; dissolve it well. Then strain and. 


bottle and seal. 
TOMATO SYRUP. 


- One pound of brown sugar to one quart of tomato juice. 
Bottle, cork and seal immediately after dissolving well. Mix 


a 


46 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


a third of a glass of the syrup with water, and you have a 
delightful beverage for sick or well. 


GRAPE WINE. 

Pick off the grapes from the stem, put them in a tub and 
mash well with pestle; let stand over night; next morning, 
pour into a bag and squeeze out the juice. When well strained, 
to each gallon two pounds of granulated sugar; stir well and 
set in open vessels to ferment, keeping it skimmed. When 
fermentation is over, filter into jugs. In two months, bottle. 


PIBS AND CUSTARDS. 


Pastry: One quart of flour will make four uncovered pies. 
Proportions: Sift one quart of flour with a little salt added. 
Take one cup of mixed lard and butter. Rub half of the 
mixed lard and butter lightly into the flour until no lumps 
appear. Then pull off a piece (one quarter of dough), roll thin; 
with a knife spread over bits of lard and butter; sprinkle with 
flour, turn over the dough and roll again; add more dough, and 
continue this until all the lard and butter is used. Handle with 
the hands as little as possible. Use cold water for mixing, and 
make as dry as you possibly can roll without crumbling ; mix 
all with the hands. This gives a nice, crisp, puffy pastry. 


PASTRY FOR ORDINARY FRUIT PIES. 
For ordinary fruit pies one quart of flour, one pinch each of 
salt and ‘soda sifted with the flour; two tablespoonsful lard 
rubbed well into the flour. Add by degrees cold water just 


PIES AND CUSTARDS. 47 


to mix enough to roll out. Do not work it at all, barely 
mixing in the ingredients. 


BLACKBERRY PIE. 


Pick over the berries; do not rinse them. Roll out your 
pastry, flour the pie pan and lay on the under crust ; put a layer 
of berries, and sprinkle brown sugar, then a little flour, and so 
, on until pie plate is full. Dredge the top with sugar and flour. 
Roll the top crust quite thin, cut three slits in the center, and 
prick over with a fork. Bake twenty minutes to half hour in a 
moderate oven. 

GREEN GOOSEBERRY PIE. 

One quart of gooseberries, pick and wash them; one tea- 
spoonful soda, one pint sugar; put them on in very little water; 
when they come to a slow boil stir in the soda, and add the 
sugar; stew until tender ; then roll out pastry, fill with fruit and 
bake. All fruit pies are made by the same process, such as 
green apples or unripe, acid fruit. 


RAISIN PIE. 


Take one pound of raisins, turn over them one quart of 
boiling water, keep adding water so there will be a quart when 
done; grate the rind of one lemon in a cup of sugar, three 
tablespoons of flour, and one egg; mix these well together ; 
turn the raisins with water over the mixture, stirring the while. 
‘This makes three pies; bake as any other pie. 


LEMON PIE. 
Grate the yellow rind of.two lemons; beat together the 
rind, juice, ten tablespoonsful white sugar, and the yelks of 
four eggs, half cup butter melted, until very light ; then add two 


48 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


tablespoons water, line a pie plate with pastry and fill with 
the mixture, and brown delicately. 


CRUMB PIE. 


Line a plate with nice pastry; rub together one-half cup of 
flour, three-quarters cup brown sugar, one large tablespoon 
butter, until it grains; fill the pie plate and bake fifteen minutes. 
This is excellent. 3 


COCOANUT PIE. 


This quantity makes three pies: One cocoanut grated, three 
eggs, one lemon; grate the rind and squeeze out the juice; two 
cups sugar, one gill sweet milk, or the milk of the cocoanut ; 
one-half cup butter melted; cream the butter, sugar and rind 
and juice of the lemon with the yelks, very light, then stir in 
the stiff beaten whites; lastly the cocoanut. Superior to all 
cocoanut ples. 


CUSTARD PIE. 


Two cups of sugar, five eggs, two tablespoonsful dry flour, 
oie cup of butter, one-half cup wine, lemon extract,} one 
teaspoonful ; stir the sugar, flour and yelks together until light; 
add the melted butter by degrees; then add the wine and flavor- 
ing; last of all the stiff-beaten whites. Have a nice pastry 
ready, and line the pie plate. Spread over this blackberry jam 
or jelly ; then pour over the custard. Bake in a moderate oven 
until done. Take out and set away to cool. If you want it 
extta nice, have either rich cream, or a thick, soft custard, and 
as you serve spread over each piece... This is an extra dessert 
pie. 

SUPERIOR APPLE PIE. 
Stew the apples, press through a colander, sweeten and 
flavor to taste; make a nice puff pastry and bake in shallow 








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PIES AND CUSTARDS. 49 


pans; when a light brown take upon plates, spread on the 
apples, and put over a layer of boiled icing flavored with lemon. 


SLICED SWEET POTATO PIE. 


Boil four good sized potatoes; let them cool, and slice in 
thin strips; line a pie pan with nice, rich pastry; lay on a layer 
of sliced potatoes; sprinkle well with sugar, allspice and cinna- 
mon; bits of butter; alternate these layers until you have two 
thicknesses; then pour over one cup of hot water with brandy © 
enough to give a nice flavor; use liberally all the ingredients 
and you have a rich, juicy pie. 


SWEET POTATO CUSTARD. 

Boil four or five good-sized potatoes; mash well to free from 
lumps and beat light; add while warm, one cup melted butter, 
two cups sugar (brown), spices to taste, four eggs; use no milk; 
lastly wine or brandy for flavoring. 


50 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


PIES Tas 


WATERMELON RIND PRESERVES. 


Prepare the rind; cut in any form you desire; fish, birds, 
flowers, etc.; boil very hard, thirty or forty minutes in alum 
water tolerably strong; take from the alum water and put into 
clear cold water; and allow them to stand over night. In the 
morning, change the water, and put them to boil; let them 
cook until they have entirely changed color, and are quite soft; 
then make your syrup, allowing one and one-half pounds of 
white sugar to one pound of fruit; then add your fruit, which 
needs but little more cooking to clear it. Mace, ginger or 
lemon flavor nicely. 

PEACH PRESERVES. 

Use yellow or white clings; cut around the stone with a pen- 
knife, so as to core the entire peach; weigh pound of fruit for 
pound of granulated sugar; do this late in the evening ; put into 
a deep bowl; sprinkle on the sugar, and cover and set away until 
morning; drain off the juice, which will be ample to cook 
them; stew fruit slowly, until transparent,. putting in small 
quantities; lay on a dish in the sun as they clear; when all are 
done tie up tight and keep in a cool place. Add to the syrup 
several peach kernels for flavoring. 


PEACH PRESERVES No. 2. 
For twelve pounds of peaches cut in halves, use six pounds 
white sugar; as you peel throw them into cold water. This 
preserves the color. Have your preserving kettle full of water ; 


PRESERVES, 51 


when it boils, add one teaspoonful soda; let boil five minutes 
more; now throw in the peaches and scald well for a few 
minutes; as you take them out, drop into a bucket of cold 
water. Then clean your kettle again, and take out the peaches. 
and wipe dry on a cloth; put them in the kettle with the sugar, 
and one pint of water, and several peach kernels. Cook all 
together if not too large a quantity, until clear. Seal up in 
glass jars. These keep well, and are very light in color. Do 
not attempt to preserve more than four pounds at one boiling 
after sugar is added. ‘They will be crowded and go to pieces. 


PRESERVED STRAWBERRIES. 


Get nice, large, fresh berries, cap them and pick over 
carefully; weigh them and an equal weight of sugar; put them 
aside for half an hour with sugar over them; now drain off the 
juice and put on the fire, adding small quantities of the ber- 
_ ries until all are used up—after boiling ten minutes, lift the 
berries out ona dish. Boil the juice ten minutes longer, and 
then add all the fruit again, and boil until clear, and syrup thick 


QUINCE PRESERVES. 

Pare the quinces, cut them in thick slices into rings, 
crosswise; weigh them, and give equal weight of sugar; put the 
parings and cores with a quart of water on to boil, cut up two 
fresh lemons and boil with them. When well flavored, strain 
this water and add the sugar; set back on fire, boil and skim ; 
add fruit and cook until clear; lay on dishes, and cook syrup 
until thick. Seal in jars. 3 


FINE PEAR PRESERVES. 


Pare the fruit and leave on the stem. Take the parings and 
cover well with water. Have a kettle of water ready on the 


52 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


fire, and when it boils, add one teaspoonful soda. Now put 
the pears in this soda water and cook them until you can pierce 
with a straw; take out at once and throw into cold water; 
strain off the water from the parings and add sugar, which must 
be pound for pound; cut into thin slices two lemons and add 
to this water; puton the fire and boil ten minutes. Now wipe 
the fruit dry on a towel, and add to the syrup until they cook 
clear and tender. Put into jars and seal up. ‘The lemon gives 
them a fine flavor; otherwise, they are insipid. 


GOOSE PLUM. PRESERVES. 

Take fine, ripe goose plums; pour over them boiling water 
and slip off the skins, saving the water for the syrup. Weigh 
pound for pound, and put into a preserving kettle, and strain 
over the water into which they were peeled; add sugar and stir 
them all gently before they boil; let them boil until clear; dip 
them out, and after the syrup is thick, use enough to cover them. 
‘The remainder of the syrup boiled a little longer will give you a 
nice, clear jelly. 

| GREEN GRAPE PRESERVES. 


Take the grapes when half grown. Cut each one into 
halves; take out the seed, using a pen-knife. Weigh pound for 
pound; turn into a preserving pan, and sprinkle the sugar in 
layers as you put them in; put over them one large cup water 
and stew gently on back of stove until clear and thick. Keeps 
well. 


MARMALADES AND SWEET PICKLE. 58 


Marmalades and Sweet Pickle. 


PEACH MARMALADE. 


Twelve pounds soft, ripe, yellow peaches, seven pounds 
granulated or light brown sugar. Put the fruit and sugar on 
.in the preserving kettle; add about one cup of water. Set back 
on the stove and stew slowly and mash until quite thick. Put 
in jars, and lay on top a tissue paper dipped in brandy, and 
tie up. 

APPLE MARMALADE. 

Peel and slice twelve pounds apples. Weigh out nine pounds 
sugar (light brown). Cover the apples with water and cook to 
a pulp.. Mash through a colander; add sugar; use enough of 
the water in which they were boiled to cover after mashing, 
Flavor with ginger or lemon, and cook down until thick and 
clear and a smooth mass. 


STRAWBERRY MARMALADE. 


Take well flavored strawberries,.one pound of fruit, three 
quarter pounds sugar. Put them together and mash, then put 
on the fire, boil and skim until a smooth mass. Put away in 
small tumblers like jelly, with a brandied paper on top, and 
cover. 

VERY. FINE GRAPE SWEET PICKLE. 

Follow these directions closely: Pick fine bunches of ripe 
grapes—white grapes and wine-colored. Do not strip them, 
but use the whole cluster. Fcr five or six pounds use four 
pounds white sugar. Take some sheiled grapes and the sugar 
and make a fine rich syrup, boiling it until it thickens like 


54 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK, 


syrup. Have the grapes rinsed clean; flavor the syrup with 
cinnamon and cloves, broken. Now take a silver fork and dip 
each bunch separately up and down into the syrup until the 
bunches are well scalded. When all have gone through this 
process, dip once more. Put them now into a close covered 
vessel and pour over the syrup. Next morning drain off all 
juice and reboil, then when nearly cold pour over the grapes. 
Do this the second morning; the third pour the syrup, after 
boiling hot, over them and tie up. They are equal to raisins, 
and very beautiful. 


GREEN CUCUMBER SWEET ‘PICKLE. 


Peel and slice. the cucumbers in half-inch slices; let them 
stand in salt water over night; drain next morning. For one 
dozen cucumbers, two pounds sugar and one pint good cider 
vinegar, cloves, allspice and cinnamon broken (to taste), a piece 
of alum size of cherry. Put on the fire and cook until tender 
and crisp. Boil syrup until thick and seal up. 


SWEET CANTALOUPE PICKLE. 


One gallon of good cider vinegar, five pounds of white sugar, 
half ounce ground mace, two ounces ground cloves, two ounces 
ground cinnamon, the peelings of three oranges. Take ripe can- 
taloupes that are not too ripe, remove the rinds and throw away 
the insides and seeds. Cut the rinds in thin slices about half 
an inch in thickness and put them into stone jars; fill a kettle 
with two-thirds vinezar and one-third water; add a piece of 
alum the size of a hickorynut; boil it a few minutes and pour 
hot over the melon rind. Let this stand fourteen hours, and 
take out the melon and throw away this vinegar. While the 
melon is draining put the spices and the remaining vinegar on 


PUDDINGS, BOILED AND BAKED. 55 


to boil for ten minutes, and pour hot over melon again—be sure 
to add sugar in above quantity to the spiced vinegar when first 
boiled. Boil this vinegar for three mornings, and the last time 
put in the melon and boil until tender. Seal up while hot, in 
jars. 





Puddings, Boiled and Baked. 


PUDDING, CROLY POLY. 


One quart of sweet milk, yelks of three eggs, one cup of 
sugar, a dessertspoonful butter, a quarter pound raisins, a 
quarter pound blanched almonds, a quarter pound figs chopped, 
an eighth pound citron cut, vanilla to taste. Put over the fire 
the milk, beat the eggs, sugar and two tablespoonsful corn- 
starch together, light; let the butter melt in the milk. When 
boiling, pour the beaten eggs, sugar and corn-starch made 
smooth into the milk and stir constantly until thick. Have 
a sponge cake ready, baked in one sheet in a broad pan, an 
inch thick. Put the cut fruit into the custard, and stir and let 
cool; spread this mixture thick over the cake; now roll up, 
wrap in a towel and set aside. Eat with a hot sauce. 


SAUCE FOR ROLY POLY. 

One large cup sugar, one-half cup butter, one pint hot 
water, one grated nutmeg, one dessertspoonful flour made 
smooth in milk. Set on the fire and boil in a ‘saucepan until 
it thickens. Have the whites beaten stiff left from the custard ; 
put them in a bowl and pour over the hot sauce, and beat until 
itfoams. Do this just before serving. 


56 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


‘TAPIOCA PUDDING WITH COCOANUT. 


Three tablespoons tapioca, one grated cocoanut, one tea 
cup white sugar, one quart milk, four eggs. Soak the tapioca 
over night; in the morning, pour off the water. Let the milk 
boil, put in the tapioca and cook ten minutes; beat the yelks of 
eggs and sugar together until light; add to this the cocoanut, 
and stir into the tapioca and milk; boil for ten minutes more 
and pour out into a pudding dish. Beat the whites with a little 
sugar; spread over the top of pudding, and on top of all a thick 
layer of cocoanut, and brown five minutes. This needs no 
sauce, and can be eaten cold. 


TRANSPARENT PUDDING. 


Half pound butter, half pound sugar, the juice of one lemon, 
one dessertspoonful corn-starch, grated nutmeg to taste, six eggs. 
Cream the butter and sugar and yelks well. Beat whites stiff 
and stir in gently. Sift in the corn-starch and stir gently; put 
into a pastry or buttered pudding-dish and bake half an hour, 
If baked without pastry, serve with hot sauce. 


SAUCE FOR PUDDING. 


Half pound butter, half pound sugar, yelks of two eggs, 
grated rind and juice of one lemon, one glass of wine. Cream 
all well together, adding wine last. When well mixed stir over 
the fire in a saucepan until it comes to a boil; have the whites 
whipped and stir in lightly. 


BROWN BETTY. 


Two cups chopped apples, one cup bread crumbs, one cup: 
brown sugar, ground cinnamon, half cup butter. Have a deep 
dish; first, a layer of apples sprinkled with sugar, cinnamon and 


PUDDINGS, BOILED AND BAKED. 5F 


bits of butter; alternate until dish is full, bread crumbs on top,. 
and pieces of butter dotted over. Steam three quarters of an 
hour by setting the dish (covered) in a vessel of boiling water. 
Uncover and bake until brown. Eat with sugar and cream. 


SWEET POTATO PUDDING. 


One pound of boiled potatoes sliced thin, one pound of 
sugar, half pound butter, two tablespoons wine, two of brandy, 
one pint rich cream; cinnamon and allspice and nutmeg. Make 
a rich pastry and line a deep pan. Put in alternate layers of 
potatoes, sugar, butter, spices until over half full. Stir the wine 
and brandy into the cream and pour over all. Put on a thin 
top crust with three slits cut in the center; prick over and bake 
half hour. 

PLUM PUDDING—DELICIOUS. 


Take two pounds soaked bread, one pound each chopped 
suet, sugar, currants, raisins; quarter pound sliced citron, one 
lemon chopped fine, one teaspoonful salt, cinnamon, allspice, 
nutmug;-one tablespoonful Royal baking powder; one cup of 
molasses. Mix all well together, and if not stiff as cake dough 
add flour to make it so; put into tin bucket; tie up tight in 
‘a bag or cloth and steam constantly for six hours—the bucket 
must be put into a pot of boiling water and kept boiling, with a 
weight to hold it down. You can keep this pudding in winter 
for two months—just warm the desired quantity, and eat with 
hot wine sauce. 

QUEEN OF PUDDINGS. 

In the morning make a quart of good, rich, thick custard ;. 
when cold, take two loaves of baker’s bread; trim off every 
particle of crust and slice thin as possible; butter each piece 
well; have a deep pan ready. Have one cup cut raisins, one 


58 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


cup washed and dried currants; put into the pan a layer of the 
sliced and buttered bread, strew over a layer of raisins and 
currants, pour over a layer of custard; alternate this until you 
have used all; pour custard on top and spread over the whites 
whipped with a little sugar, and bake ten minutes. Set where 
it will keep warm, but not hot. Eat with the following sauce: 


FAIRY BUTTER SAUCE. 


Cream together, until light, one and a half cups white sugar, 
one cup butter; bind with white of one egg beaten stiff, flavor 
with vanilla, and stir through a few raisins and currants. Give 
a liberal quantity in serving pudding. 


PLUM PUDDING No. 2. 


One cup each of chopped suet, molasses, sweet milk and 
raisins, half cup currants, three cups flour, two teaspoonsful 
baking powder sifted in flour, one teaspoonful nutmeg, cinna- 
mon and mace. Steam two hours. 


SAUCE FOR SAME. 


One cup sugar, one-half of butter, stirred toacream. Then 
add two well-beaten eggs; dissolve one tablespoonful corn-starch 
in a little water; add one cup boiling water and boil this a few 
‘minutes, and then pour over the eggs, butter and sugar, and stir 
hard, Flavor with vanilla. 


FRENCH RICE PUDDING. 


Pick and wash a couple of handfuls of rice, and put to cook — 
in a little less than a quart of milk sweetened to taste, and 
with the thin rind of a lemon peeled and one small stick of 
cinnamon. Let the rice simmer gently until it has absorbed all 
‘the milk. Turn it out into a bowl, and when cold remove the 


PUDDINGS, BOILED AND BAKED. 59 


lemon rind and cinnamon; then stir into it the yelks of four 
eggs and one whole one beaten up well together. Add now a 
small quantity of candied citron cut in small pieces, and mix it 
well in. Butter and bread crumb a plain tin mold, put the 
mixture in and bake in a quick oven half an hour. Eat with 
sugar and cream. 


BREAD PUDDING WITH COCOANUT. 

Fill a pudding-dish with bread crumbs, and make a quart of 
custard and pour over it, saving the whites of the four eggs used 
in ‘making custard for frosting. Add to the bread and custard 
one cup grated or dessicated cocoanut, and let stand on the 
back of the range till bread is soft, then bake. When done, 
frost with the whites beaten with sugar until stiff. This requires 


no sauce, 
AL DELICATESTRA: DISH. 


Pare and core fair apples and put in a pudding-dish; fill the 
cores with sugar and grated cocoanut and sprinkle liberally over. 
Add the juice of a lemon and half cup water. Cover closely ; 
“set the dish in a pan of hot water and bake in a hot oven until 
clear and tender. When cold, serve with cream and cocoanut 
stirred in, sweetened to taste and flavored with lemon. 


CANNED PEACHES FOR TEA. 


Drain the peaches, place in a glass dish, and cover with the 
whites of six eggs beaten stiff with sugar and flavored with 
lemon. Make of the yelks and one spoonful corn-starch one 
quart of custard, and serve with the peaches. 


CHOCOLATE CREAM PUDDING—COLD FOR TEA. 


Serve it very cold. Into one quart of milk put one cup sugar, 
a little salt, the yelks of four eggs, four large tablespoonsful 


60 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


grated chocolate. Put on the fire, and when boiling stir im 
three tablespoons corn-starch smoothed in cold milk; stir until 
thick. When cold, flavor generously with vanilla; frost the 
whole with the whites well sweetened and brown delicately. 


COMBINATION ROLY POLY. 


Roll out some nice pastry and spread it with the following 
mixture: Half pound each of figs, prunes (stewed and stoned): 
and dates cut small; the same of raisins, brown sugar and. 
chopped apples, with a little spice flavoring. (This is not all 
required for one pudding, but can be gotten in half the quantity 
or kept in jars for further use.) Spread this mixture over a thin 
sheet of dough, roll into a long roll, tie up in a towel and boil 
from two to three hours, according to size. Eat with a hot 
sauce. Delicious. 


SPONGE: CAKE PUDDING. 


Take slices of sponge cake and lay them in a baking-pan; 
spread over each slice blackberry jam. Have a quart of nice 
custard made thick by corn-starch and flavored with vanilla, 
pour a layer of custard over the cake and jam (use no butter) 
until dish is full; put.custard on top. Make a frosting of the 
whites sweetened with sugar and spread over the top, and set 
into a moderate oven and bake ten minutes. Set away until 
wanted. Bake about one hour before serving and let it nearly 
cool. 

RICE RAISIN PUDDING. 

Boil one cup of well washed rice and a cup of stemmed 
raisins, whole, together. When the rice and raisins are soft 
pour off the water, and put on the rice and raisins one pint of 
rich milk and four tablespoons sugar. After this has boiled five 


PUDDINGS, BOILED AND BAKED, 6L 


minutes or less add two well-beaten eggs, stirring well while 
adding eggs. Keep stirring on the fire five minutes longer, and 
the pudding will be done without forming a custard on top, 
which would be the case if you did not stir while adding the 
eggs. Very nice. 


COCOANUT CUSTARD PUDDING. 

Boil one quart of milk; when it boils, stir in three spoonsful 
corn-starch made smooth in cold milk, and one large spoonful 
butter; let it now stand until quite cold. Beat six eggs, the 
yelks and whites separate; add to the yelks a quarter pound of 
‘sugar and the grated pulp of one cocoanut. Now stir this well 
into the cold mixture (set aside previously), and last the beaten 
whites. Set in the oven and bake ten or fifteen minutes, and 
flavor well with vanilla; eat cold for dessert. 


STRAWBERRY SAUCE FOR PUDDING. 

Half cup butter, one cup sugar, the beaten white of one 
egg, one cupful of mashed strawberries, mashed and stemmed. 
Beat the butter and sugar to a cream; add the white, and 
mashed berries. Set over a kettle of hot water on the back 
of stove just a little while; do not let it get hot, but just 
lukewarm. Send to table in a sauce boat. 


BAKED APPLE DUMPLINGS. 

Take eight good sized, tart apples; peel and slice them 
thin; make a nice crust of dough, and cut into biscuit; roll 
these thin in a circular shape; fill each with chopped apple and 
brown sugar; close up, and place into a broad skillet; sprinkle 
liberally with brown sugar, and butter each dumpling well; 
grate over nutmeg and allspice; pour over a pint of water and 


62 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


boil on top of stove until tender, then set inside the oven and 
brown until done. There will be plenty of juice to serve them. 


SOUFFLE PUDDING. 


Make a quart of nice, thick, boiled custard; when cold flavor 
with vanilla; grate one good sized cocoanut, stir through the 
custard, and one large tablespoonful melted butter; crumble 
one cupful stale sponge cake and stir this into the other; lastly, 
whip the whites stiff of the five eggs left from making the custard 
and stir lightly through, then bake for ten minutes. Serve when 
nearly cold. 

PINEAPPLE -PUDDING. 


One can of grated pineapple, one-half cup bread or cracker 
crumbs, one and a half cups granulated sugar, a heaping 
tablespoonful of butter, four eggs. Cream all these together, 
adding pineapple last; omit the whites of two eggs, beat these 
with tablespoon sugar and frost, and spread over the pudding 
when nearly done. 


CAKES AND CAKE-MAKING. 6s 


Cakes and Cake-Making. 


Use none but the best ingredients. Fresh butter always; 
wash out salt well, and cream light. Sift flour before weighing, 
have it dry and free from lumps. Use fresh eggs, which can 
always be had in winter, and put them in ice water in warm 
weather to separate them well. The least yellow in them causes. 
the whites to look streaky and do not froth high, which is an 
essential point in cake-making. Have your cake-pans clean 
and bright and well greased with lard. If the pan is thin and 
old, line with paper cut to fit nicely. Temper the oven before 
the cake is ready, and have a clear, brisk fire. Put over the 
rack a large pan full of cold water to prevent the cake from brown- 
ing too fast, and giving ample time to rise well. Watch closely 
during the baking process and keep the heat well up or the 
cake will fall if the temperature falls. One hour to one anda 
half is ‘sufficient for pound cake, two to three for a large fruit 
cake; two hours moderate heat for white cake as this requires 
slow baking. Adhere to these rules and you will have perfect 
success. 

DROP CAKE. 

One cup each sour cream, sugar, one teaspoonful soda, 
half cup currants, one and a half cups flour. Flavor with 
nutmeg or cinnamon. Drop from a spoon and bake in a quick 
oven. 

FRUIT CAKE No. 1. 


One pound of flour browned in the oven, one pound each 
of brown sugar and citron, two pounds raisins, two pounds 
currants, three-fourths pound butter, one cup molasses, two 


G4 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


teaspoonsful each of mace, cassia and cloves, one teaspoonful 
soda and twelve eggs. This is an excellent recipe, and makes 
two loaves, Bake in a slow oven. 


POUND CAKE. 


One pound each of butter, sugar and flour, ten eggs; cream 
butter and flour well together; stir yelks and sugar until very 
light; beat whites stiff; add the yellow batter to the flour and 
butter, previously adding the cut whites to that. Stir all thor- 
oughly; flavor with rose-water. 7 


VANDERBILT FRUIT CAKE—DELICIOUS. 


One cup butter, two cups sugar, one cup sweet milk, 
three cups flour (after sifting), two even teaspoonsful baking 
powder sifted in the flour—sift twice; whites of seven eggs, 
one pound each of raisins cut, figs chopped fine, dates stoned 
and cut, blanched almonds cut fine, and one quarter pound citron 
cut, Flour the fruit and stir in batter when very light. Cream 
butter and half of sugar very light; beat whites stiff and then 
beat in by spoonsful the other half of sugar. Now add flour 
and whites alternately until all is used. Pour into a buttered 
‘cake pan, and bake in a slow oven for two hours. Delicious. 


HARLEQUIN CAKE—DELICIOUS AND BEAUTIFUL. 


One cup of white sugar, quarter cup butter, half cup sweet 
milk, one anda half cups flour, one and a half teaspoons baking 
powder, whites of four eggs. Cream butter and sugar together ; 
add milk; then the flour and baking powder sifted together ; 
then the eggs beaten very light and one teaspoonful vanilla; 
use half of this batter for the white layer. Color the other half 
with cochineal for pink layer. Prepare the cochineal by 


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CAKES AND CAKE-MAKING,. 65. 


bruising teaspoonful, and dissolve in two tablespoonsful boiling 
water; strain through a cloth or muslin, and mix one and a half 
teaspoonsful with batter; flavor this with rosewater. Now make 
another batter of one cup sugar, quarter cup butter, half cup 
milk, one and a quarter cups flour, two teaspoonsful baking 
powder, the yelks of four eggs. Cream butter and sugar 
together; add the eggs and stir light; then milk, grated rind, 
and juice of one lemon. Use half of this for the yellow layer; 
color the other half by mixing in one ounce Baker’s chocolate 
melted in hot water over the fire. Bake in jelly cake. pans. 
These layers can be put together with cocoanut, soft icing, jelly 
or chocolate. It is exceedingly pretty when cut, and keeps 
well. The materials cost thirty-one cents. 


SILVER“ ORY BRIDE’S’* CAKE, 


The whites of sixteen eggs beaten to a stiff froth; stir to 
them one pound of pulverized sugar, Cream together three- 
quarters of a pound of butter, and one light pound of flour 
sifted twice, then weighed. Add all together—use no spices. 
Flavor with rosewater, or bitter almond. If a large cake is 
wanted, double this quantity. Bake slowly. 


ICE CREAM CAKE. 


Make a nice sponge cake, using one pound sugar, one 
-pound flour sifted with one teaspoonful baking powder (three 
times), ten eggs. Stir yelks and sugar very light and creamy 
together; add to this the stiff whites, and juice of one lemon. 
Then stir with a silver fork the flour in very lightly, pour into a 
baking pan and bake forty minutes in a brisk oven. When 
cold, slice off all the brown part; then slice in half-inch thick- 
ness, and spread Between each layer a pint of whipped, rich 


5 


66 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


cream flavored with two or three spoonsful sugar and one tea- 
spoonful vanilla beaten until stiff as can be. Add to this one 
pound blanched almonds cut fine. (Fine.) 


CHOCOLATE CAKE. 


This cake will be found to be quite different from ordinary 
chocolate cake, andif directions are followed implicitly, it will be 
found to be perfect. ‘Take one cup grated chocolate, one cup 
sugar, one-half cup milk, yelk of one egg. Boil all this 
together until it thickens; let it get cold. While this mixture is 
cooling, make a cake of one cup sugar, one-half butter, one- 
half sweet milk, two and onehalf flour after sifting, two 
teaspoonsful baking powder, four eggs beaten separately, one 
tablespoonful vanilla for flavoring. Beat this batter very light, 
and add to it the chocolate mixture if perfectly cold; stir it 
in well. Bake in four jelly cake pans. Then make a boiled 
icing of one pound sugar, half cup water; dissolve well; beat 
stiff whites of three eggs; and when the sugar boils almost 
to the crackle, pour over the whites and beat hard. When 
icing is cold, put between layers quite thick and frost the top. 


COCOANUT CAKES. 

One pound grated cocoanut; one pound pulverized sugar ; 
rosewater to taste; whites of three eggs. Stir the cocoanut 
and sugar over the fire until it begins to dry, add the eggs 
without beating, and while hot, flavor delicately with rosewater. 
Drop in little cakes flattened on greased paper and brown in the 
oven. Sift over pulverized sugar when cold. 


WHITE CAKE. 


Whites of thirteen eggs, one pound granplated sugar, half 
pound butter, one pound flour, two teaspoonsful cream of | 


CAKES AND CAKE-MAKING., 67 


tartar sifted in the flour three times; vanilla to taste. Beat 
eggs until very stiff; add sugar slowly tothem. Put the cream 
of tartar in the flour before sifting, and cream with the butter: 
then add the eggs which have been beaten into a meringue. 


- Pour into a pound pan, and bake rather slowly for one hour and 
a half. 


GOLDEN CAKE. 


For one cake select four large, deep-colored oranges, and roll 

each under your hand upon a table to soften them, and increase 
the juice. Weigh a pound of best loaf sugar; on some of the 
largest pieces rub off the outer rind until a deep yellow color. 
Cut up the oranges, and squeeze their juice through a strainer. 
Powder all the sugar, including the pieces with the orange zest 
upon them. Now transfer the sugar and one pound of butter to 
a deep bowl, and cream very light together. Beat twelve eggs, 
{omitting the whites of three) separately; sift one quart of 
the best flour, and measure after sifting; stir this flour into the 
batter, now ready mixed, as you would a poundcake. Bake in 
jelly tins, filling quite to the top. Grate two oranges, taking 
out the seeds; beat the whites of three eggs stiff with one cup 
sugar, stir in the grated orange and put between the layers. 
This is the finest of all golden cakes. 


CALCULA LILIES. 


Make a white sponge cake with the whites of six eggs, one 
cup pulverized sugar, one cup flour after sifting four times; 
beat whites very stiff; add sugar by degrees, then flour, beating 
in with a silver fork; flavor with bitter almonds; put the batter 
in a tin pan, so that it will be an inch thick when baked. When 
done, cut into squares and roll up in the shape of a calla lily ; 
stand each one in a wine glass, and fill with whipped cream. 


68 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


Now put in a small strip of yellow sponge cake to represent 


a spadix. 
DELICATE CAKE. 


One-half pound butter and one pound sugar creamed 
together very light; add one cup sweet milk, the whites of 
seven eggs cut to a froth. Put in alternately with one pound 
sifted flour in which two teaspoonsful Royal baking powder has 
been stirred. Bake ina slow oven. Flavor as you like. 


LAYER CAKE. 


Whites of ten eggs, one full cup butter, two cups sugar, three 
cups flour, three teaspoonsful baking powder sifted into the 
flour three times; half cup sweet milk. Cream sugar and butter 
together; cut the whites stiff and stir alternately with the flour 
into the sugar and butter; flavor highly with rose-water. Trans- 
fer the batter to a one-pound pan; bake a nice, light-brown. 
When cold shave off all the brown part and‘slice the cake in 
half-inch thicknesses. 

FILLING. 

Make one pound of boiled icing as thick as can be; when 
cold, stir into the icing one grated cocoanut and half can grated 
pineapple with the juice strained out; flavor with rose-water 
and put between layers, 


SPONGE CAKE—EXCELLENT. 

Ten eggs, two cups of sugar, two cups of flour sifted, then 
measured ; one fresh lemon. Beat half the sugar with yelks; 
beat whites stiff, and beat into them the other half of sugar, then 
stir this into the yelks and sugar previously beaten; add flour 
last, carefully, mixing gently with a silver fork. You can not 
be too careful in mixing in the flour; if stirred rapidly it will 
cause the batter to fall and the cake to be tough. Add lemon 


CAKES AND CAKE-MAKING. 69 


before beginning to mix flour. Bake forty minutes in a quick 
oven. 
ANGEL FOOD. 

One anda half glasses sugar—fine granulated ; one glass 
flour, one teaspoonful cream of tartar. Flavor with vanilla. Sift 
sugar five times; sift flour four times. Remeasure flour; add 
cream of tartar, and siftonce more. Beat eggs verystiff on a 
large plate; stir in the sugar very lightly, beating all the time ; 
last, flour very light. Do not grease the pan; bake forty 
minutes. When done turn out on a table with two sticks under 
to raise the pan for ventilation. 


WHITE SPONGE CAKE. 

One and a half tumblers of pulverized sugar with a pinch of 
salt mixed with sugar, one tumbler of flour with teaspoonful 
cream \of tartar mixed in; whites of ten eggs. Beat the eggs 
very light, then add sugar by degrees and beat well; now stir in 
the flour as quickly and lightly as possible. Put into a well- 
heated oven. Grease your pan as for any other cake. 


NUGAT CAKE—NUGAR. 

Whites of ten eggs, one large cup butter, two large cups 
sugar, three large cups’ flour, one-half cup milk, three tea- 
spoonsful baking powder. Bake these layers in three bread 
pans; bake slowly, and these layers should be two inches thick. 


FILLING. 


One-quarter pound citron cut, one-half pound raisins cut, 
one-quarter pound figs cut; one pound French candy cut in 
thick pieces, one-half pound crystallized fruits cut, one cocoanut 
grated. Make a boiled icing (whites of four eggs and one 
pound sugar). Put the cut citron in one layer, raisins in 


70 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


one, figs in one. Bake this fruit in the batter. Ice one layer 
and stick the candied fruit and candies as thick as possible over 
the icing, then fill all the crevices with cooked cocoanut. Cook 
the nut and sugar in equal weights together for five minutes, 
stirring all the time; put on another layer and do likewise. 
Ice the top and cover the same way. This is extravagant, but 
most delicious. 
CARAMEL CAKE. 


Bake any kind of layer cake, and use the following filling: 
‘Two cups brown sugar, one cup butter, one cup cream, vanilla 
flavoring. Cook this mixture until thick, and do not stir while 
cooking ; remove from the fire, and beat like icing until cold; 
spread between layers. 


WHITE FRUIT CAKE-—-LAYER. 


One cup butter beaten to a cream; add two cups sugar and 
cream well; sift three cups flour together with two teaspoonsful 
baking powder, and stiffly-beaten whites of six eggs. Bake in 
jelly tins, and while still hot put between the layers the follow- 
ing filing: Chop fine one-fourth pound each of figs, raisins, 
citron, dates and blanched almonds, and stir this fruit into three 
whites of eggs beaten stiff with a tea cup of powdered sugar and 
juice of one lemon; put tais between the layers, and frost over 
the top. This 7s a most delicious cake. . 


LAVER CAKE: No.2: 

Six eggs, one cup butter, two cups sugar, four cups flour, 
one teaspoon soda mixed in a spoonful hot water and two tea- 
spoonsful cream of tartar sifted in the flour. Bake in shallow; 
pans. Take two grated cocoanuts, one small cake chocolate 
grated, the whites of four eggs beaten some but not stiff, two 


CAKES AND CAKE-MAKING., al: 


pounds sugar and one tumbler of water. Boil.the water and 
sugar nearly to the crackle; pour over the whites and beat until 
stiff. Now divide this icing into three parts: Into one part mix 
cocoanut flavored with lemon, into the next put chocolate melted 
in a little water and flavored with vanilla, then place this in 
alternate layers between the cake. Whenit is filled up high, ice 
the top with the third part, and sprinkle over thickly grated 
cocoanut which you have kept for this purpose. One of my 
favorite recipes. 


LADY CAKE—NEVER FAILS, 


One pound and a quarter of butter, one pound of sugar, one 
pound and half flour, whites of twenty eggs. Cream together 
butter and sugar well; add flour and stiffly-beaten whites alter- 
nately until well mixed. Flavor with rose-water. This makes 
a large cake. Bake ina slow oven. 


NUE CARE: 


Two cups each of butter and corn-starch, three of sugar, 
one of sweet milk, six of flour with two teaspoonsful cream of 
tartar sifted in four times; measure after sifting. Now mix in 
the corn-starch and sift once again; whites of fourteen eggs 
beaten stiff. Cream butter and sugar well; add milk. Now 
add flour and whites alternately, by spoonsful. Stir until very 
light. Bake in one loaf. When cold, shave off all brown part 
and cut just through the middle, half and half. Make a boiled 
icing of one pound sugar and three eggs. When cold, stir into 
it one pound blanched and chopped almonds, half-pound citron, 
one pound raisins cut fine, half-pound figs. This will make a 
stiff icing, but none too stiff; spread an inch thick between the 
cake, and all on the sides and top after joining together ; put on 
thinly at first and smooth down well with a knife, so as to make 


ee, PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


it adhere; then spread as thick as you want. If a little too 
stiff to work well, add a little boiling water to soften it just 
right. This cake, when cold, has a rough, nutty appearance, 
and is very fine. 

SILVER LAYER CAKE. 

Three-quarters pound sifted flour, one pound sugar, six | 
ounces butter, whites of fourteen eggs. Cream sugar and 
butter together; add whites beaten stiff; then the flour and stir 
very light; flavor as you like. Bake in shallow tins. Make a 
filling of boiled icing, one pound sugar boiled with half cup 
water to the crackle, whites of three eggs beaten stiff; pour 
over the sugar and beat hard until cold and stiff. Add the 
grated rind and juice of one orange, grated rind and juice of 
half lemon. When cold, spread between layers. 


WHITE FRUIT CAKE. 


Whites of eighteen eggs, one pound sugar, one pound flour, 
three-quarters pound butter. Cream butter and sugar together. 
Beat whites stiff and add alternately with flour in which you 
have sifted two teaspoonsful baking powder. 

The above recipe is used for a white fruit cake, adding to 
the batter two grated cocoanuts, one pound citron (cut), one 
pound blanched and cut almonds. Flour the fruit before mix- 
ing—except cocoanut. 

SPONGE --CAKE, 

One cup of sugar, two eggs, one-half cup cold water, one 
pint flour, and one teaspoonful baking powder. Sift flour before 
measuring. Beat thoroughly the sugar and eggs, then add the 
water, flour and baking powder, and beat thoroughly again. 
Lastly, add the beaten whites, but do not beat them into the 
batter. The cake will be as light as a puff. Remember, you 


CAKES AND CAKE-MAKING., Tex 


can not do too much beating before you add the whites, but 
_they must almost float on the top of the batter. 


FRUIT CAKE. 


One pound brown sugar, one pound browned flour, three- 
fourths pound butter, one cup molasses, three pounds seedless 
raisins, one pound citron, two pounds currants, two teaspoonsful 
mace and cinnamon, one of cloves, one of black pepper, one nut- 
meg, one teaspoon soda, twelve eggs, one-half cup brandy into 
which steep the spices over night. This cake keeps for six 
months. 

SILVER CAKE. 

Whites of seven eggs, two cups sugar, one-half cup butter, 
one cup sweet milk, three and one-half cups flour, two heaping 
teaspoonsful baking powder sifted in the flour, any flavoring 
you desire. This cake requires much beating to give it a 
velvety appearance. Mode: Beat butter and sugar; add 
beaten whites and beat hard; then add milk and flour, and beat 
hard again. Bake in a slow oven. 


LAFAYETTE GINGERBREAD. 

Cut up in deep pan half pound of butter, with half pound 
of excellent brown sugar, and cream together with the hand. 
Add a pint West India molasses mixed with half pint warm, 
sweet milk, four tablespoons ginger, ground, a heaped table 
spoonful of mixed, powdered cinnamon, mace and nutmeg, one 
wine glass of brandy. Sift in one pound and a half flour, and 
stir well. Beat six eggs till very light and thick altogether, 
and mix them thoroughly into the batter; dissolve in warm 
water in two separate cups, one level teaspoonful soda, and 
a saltspoon level full of tartaric acid. First stir in the soda, 


74 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


and then the acid. Butter an oblong pan, pour in the mixture 
and bake in a moderate oven until thoroughly done. Two 
oranges, grated rind and juice, flavor nicely. ‘This is superior to 
all gingerbread if well made. 


CUP CAKE. 

One cup butter, two teaspoonsful baking powder, sifted 
three times in flour, one quart flour, six eggs beaten separately, 
two cups sweet milk; two and half cups sugar. Mix as for 
pound cake. Bake in one loaf.or in small pans. 


CREAM PUFFS. 


Three-quarters of a pound of flour, one teaspoonful baking 
powder, one pint of water, one good lump of butter size of 
goose egg, pinch of salt, eight eggs. Put the butter and water 
on the fire to boil; when it boils stir in by handsful the flour, 
stirring briskly all the time. When thick and smooth remove 
the kettle and continue beating with the spoon. Now break in, 
two at a time, the eggs, beating them in until a smooth mass. 
Lastly, stir in the baking powder. Place, by spoonsful, in a 
baking-pan and bake twenty minutes, when they will puff up 
high and light. When done lay ona dish to cool. Cut a slit in 
the side of each puff and fill with the following cream: One pin- 
of milk put to boil, four eggs, one cup sugar, and two table- 
spoonsful corn-starch stirred well together and added to the 
milk. Stir well until it thickens. When cold, fill the puff full. 
Flavor highly with vanilla, and ice the top of each or sprinkle 
over pulverized sugar. 


GINGER SNAPS. 


Melt together one pint of lard and one pint of molasses, two 
quarts flour sifted, one tablespoonful ground ginger mixed dry 


ICING. 7B 


in the flour, one teaspoonful soda beaten in the melted lard and 
molasses until thick and light color; mix with the flour as soft 
as you can roll thin; flour your board each time you roll; flour 
the baking-pan and bake quickly. These will keep several 
weeks in a close covered box. 





ICING. 


CONFECTIONERS’ ICING. 


One tablespoon cold water to the white of one egg; beat this 
together with a spoon, adding pulverized sugar until thick 
enough; then add a little tartaric acid and beat until very 
white. This is easily made. Flavor with rosewater or bitter 
almonds. You can double these proportions if you wish a large 
quantity. This icing is smooth and glassy, and does not crack. 
Do not use it for ornamenting. 


TEIN GrAZ CAKE: 

In using boiled icing spread it over the cake while the cake 
is hot; put on a thin layer at first, then pour on quite thick 
on the top, and let it run down on the sides smoothing quickly 
as itruns. You can doit very quickly, and ice several cakes in 
half an hour. 

BOILED ICING. 

Weigh a pound of granulated or loaf sugar; dissolve thor- 
oughly with one scant tea-cup hot water; add one tablespoonful 
nice light vinegar, and boil until when dropped in a cup of cold 
water it will be brittle. Have the whites of three or four eggs 


76 _ PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


‘beaten stiff, and pour the hot syrup in a steady stream, while 
another person beats hard and quick, as it falls from the kettle. 
This makes a smooth, thick icing. For icing over a cake, pour 
over the top and spread with a broad knife dipped in cold 
‘water. 





ORNAMENTING. 


ORNAMENTING CAKE. 


Make a thick, boiled icing. After the cake has been iced 
over and is thoroughly dry, trace any design very lightly with a 
pencil or pin. Have several paper cones ready in shape of cor- 
nucopia; make them of paper, not too stiff, and when in proper 
‘shape sew them together or pin the top, then squeeze through 
with the hand, pressing firm, and trace the design you have 
marked out. If you wish the embossing very heavy go over the 
‘same tracing several times. 


APPLE SHORT CAKE. 


Stew tender juicy apples in a very little water until they are 
smooth and thick; season them with sugar, little butter and 
pinch of salt; flavor with lemon extract if you like. Make 
a short cake of one pint flour sifted with two teaspoons of 
baking powder and little salt. Rub a piece of butter half the 
size of an egg thoroughly into the flour, and mix it into a soft 
dough with sweet milk, about a coffee-cup full. Divide this 
lump into two equal parts; take one of these on a floured 
board, and roll into a sheet, handling as little as possible; lay 
it in a shallow baking pan and brush over with melted butter; 


ORNAMENTING. ayy 


then roll out the balance of the dough and lay it over the 
buttered piece. - Bake in a hot oven until done; then divide 
the cake, which will separate where it was buttered; butter the 
lower half, and spread it generously with the apple sauce; put 
on the balance of the cake, crust down; butter and spread with. 
sauce ; sift over all white sugar and serve with cream. 


LACE LEAVES EMBOSSED. 

Cut out of bobinet, not too coarse, any shape you desire— 
oak leaves are very pretty. Wire them all on the edge with. 
milliner’s wire and stiffen it with the same through the middle. 
Leave an end of the wire where you join it, stick this end down. 
in the cake and put a pin in the other end. Bend the leaf, so. 
that it will be raised up in the middle and not lie flat down on 
the cake. Now take a paper horn, cut off a small piece from 
the narrow end and use the icing in any design. 


CUP CAI ESNo: <2: 

Two cups white sugar, one cup butter, one cup sour 
cream four, cups sifted flour, six eggs, small teaspoon soda 
dissolved in milk-warm water and stirred in the last thing. 
Mix as an ordinary pound cake. This is a good, cheap layer 


cake batter. 
LEMON FILLING FOR CUP CAKE. 


One cup sugar, two eggs, two tablespoonsful butter the 
juice and grated rind of two lemons; beat all together and 
— boil until like jelly. 


STRAWBERRY SHORT CAKE. 
This is made by the same recipe given above. Take one 
quart of nice, ripe strawberries; mash them well and sweeten to 
taste. Spread this fruit between the crust, buttering well each 


78 PRACTICAL; COOK BOOK. 


piece. You can ice the top and eat with whipped cream. 
Spread berries thick over the top.. This must.be eaten when 
almost cold; use it the same day it is made, as the berries lose 
their rich flavor after standing. 


JUMBLES No. 1. 

One pound sifted flour, half pound of butter, one pound 
sugar, six eggs. Cream butter and sugar and yelks of eggs 
together; beat whites and add to this mixture, then add flour 
and stir until very light. Bake in small patty pans or drop ona 
flat, greased baking-pan by spoonsful, not too close together. 
When done, sift over pulverized sugar or ice the top. 


JUMBLES No. 2. 

One quart flour sifted with two teaspoonsful baking powder, 
one cup butter rubbed through the flour with the hand; beat 
three eggs until thick; add one small cup milk. Pour this into 
the flour and knead with the hand as soft as you can manage it. 
Have ready some grated cocoanut and currants mixed dry 
together and sprinkled thick over the sheet of rolled dough; 
flour your cake cutter and cut out the cakes and bake in a quick 
oven. ‘These are very nice. 


CHOCOLATE AND COCOANUT JUMBLES. 


Beat one cup butter toa cream, then add two cups sugar and 
stir thoroughly together. Beat well together four eggs and stir 
in the batter. Sift two teaspoonsful baking powder into three 
scant cups of flour; half teaspoon salt. Stir this into batter and 
mix well. It should now be stiff enough to roll out; if not add 
flour to make itso. Divide the dough into two parts; into one, 
grate three-fourths cup of sweet chocolate; into the other a cup 


_—_—- 


ORNAMENTING. 79 


of grated or dessicated cocoanut. Roll out each sheet thin, and 
lay the chocolate on top of the cocoanut, press down and bake 
in quick oven. 

JELLY ROLL. 


Bake sponge cake in flat bread pans, rather more than inch 
thick ; when done turn out on a paper and spread quick with 
any kind of jelly, roll up and place in a towel rolled tightly 
around to keep in shape. Sift over white sugar after removing 
the towel, which can be done when the cake is cold. 


PINEAPPLE ROLL. 

Bake a sponge cake on a flat baking pan, rather more than 
aninchthick. Split through the middle with a broad knife; after 
cutting, spread with cooked grated pineapple ands roll-up inva 
towel. You can ice over the rolls with plain icing if you like. 


PLAIN CAKE. 

Two and half cups of sugar, one of butter, one sweet milk, 
teaspoonful cream tartar, half teaspoonful of soda, four cups of 
flour sifted. Sift cream of tartar with flour, dissolve soda in a 
little warm water; four eggs. Mix exactly as pound cake, 
adding soda the last thing. If you double this quantity it will 
make two loaves or two large layer cakes. If batter is divided 
use spices, cut raisins and citron and place in alternate layers 


‘with the plain batter. This is cheap, and bakes well. 


COCOANUT BALLS—FOR FANCY DISH. 


The whites of two unbeaten eggs stirred in after cooking. 
Grate two cocoanuts if you wish a good quantity, and put the 
dry cocoanut in a brass kettle over the fire; stir through it two 
pounds of sugar, dry. Stir all the time until dry and crumbly ; 


80 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


remove from the fire and roll into cones the size of English 
walnut in the heart of the hand; butter a white sheet of 
paper and put the balls inch apart on it, set this on a thick board 
or pan and put into a quick oven until slightly brown; remove 
with a knife. Have ready some sugar rolled in grated orange 
peel and mix this with dry cocoanut and fringe over the little 
cones. Colorsome more cocoanut with pink flavored with rose 
water and fringe the cones. Color some with chocolate in the 
same way, and pile the different cones high up in glass dishes 
or cake baskets. 
COCOANUT JUMBLES. 

Two cups sugar, one cup butter, two eggs, two cups cocoa- 
nut grated, small teaspoonful soda, and enough flour to make 
stiff batter. Drop by teaspoonsful upon. buttered paper in pans 
and bake in quick oven. 





a ee 


re ey ei ma ent 


“ 


4 





MISCELLANEOUS. 81 


hibsGE LLANE OUS. 


CREAM SPONGE. 


One cup sugar, one egg, one cup sweet milk, two cups 
flour, two heaping teaspoonsful baking powder, one tablespoon- 
ful butter, the grated rind and juice of half lemon. Cream the 
butter and sugar, the grated rind and juice of lemon, beat in 
the egg, add the milk, gradually stirring all the time, then the 
flour and baking powder sifted together. Bake in three layers 
in quick oven. 

CREAM FOR ABOVE. 

Two tablespoonsful of corn-starch dissolved in a little cold 
water, one cupful of granulated sugar, one-fourth cup butter 
stirred together. Pour on one pint boiling water, add the yelks 
of three eggs, beaten light, and stir over the fire until thick. 
When cold add juice of half the lemon and spread between the 
layers ; sift powdered sugar over the top. 


PICKLED NASTURTIONS. 
Keep a jar of cold vinegar, gather the seed after the flower 
falls about the size of grains of corn and simply drop these into 
_the vinegar. A nice relish with meat. 


LETTUCE SALAD. : 

Take nice tender heads of lettuce—crisp them in water— 
drain and just before serving cut them up on a dish with a 
sharp knife. Have ready some meat gravy, sprinkle over a 
little salt and pepper, two spoonsful white sugar, crumbie two 
hard boiled eggs with a silver fork, mix all together lightly with 


6 


82 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


a fork and pour over the meat gravy.and toss lightly; then add 
about half cup good, sharp vinegar, Slice an egg to lay over 
the top. Serve on side dishes. 


POTATOE AU GRATIN. 


Pare and cut in dice enough potatoes to fill a quart baking 
dish ; also one good sized onion, and fill the dish with alternate 
layers of potato and onion, sprinkling each layer with salt, pep- 
per, chopped parsely and bits of butter. Fill the dish with 
sweet milk and sprinkle a thick layer of bread crumbs over the 
top. Bake one hour in a moderate oven. 


COLD HOMINY PUDDING. 

Take two cups cold hominy left from breakfast, add three 
eggs and tablespoonful melted butter, pepper and salt; beat until 
a smooth mass, then add one pint sweet milk; pour into a round 
pan and bake half-hour. Nice for dinner, 


Fi$ 


SUMMER SQUASH. 


“Boil or steam the squash until tender, take them from the 
vines when the size of goose eggs; lay them out in a skillet and 
mash smooth with a spoon, add butter, pepper, salt, one table- 

- spoonful cream and stew them down until thick. If no objec- 
.tion is made, one chopped onion flavors nicely; also a little 
«corn added. 


MOCK MACARONI. 


Pound up one tea-cup crackers, one tea-cup grated or crum- 
bled. cheese, three or four eggs, pepper, salt, little mustard and 
lump of butter size of an egg; beat eggs well, stir in the cracker- 
crumbs, cheese, salt, pepper and mustard, then add one tea-cup 
sweet milk, bake half hour just before wanted. I have used 


MISCELLANEOUS. 83 


o 


bread crumbs, cold rice, cold hominy or crumbled biscuit; all 
are good. 


CORN FOR WINTER USE. 

Gather the corn when quite tender, cut from the cob, saving 
all the milk. ‘Take a two gallon stone jar and sprinkle the bot- 
tom with rock salt, put on five inches of corn and one inch 
of salt, press down firm and so on until jar is nearly full, an inch 
fiesdit on-top. Pour over, after filling the jar, about two 
quarts cold water; then when settled put on last layer of salt; 
lay on a weight on top of all. Tie up tight and set away in a 
cool cellar. When wanted for use put to soak over night, or 
rinse in several cold waters, then put ina pan and cover with 
water; when it boils pour off and cover again, drain off the 
second water and add cup of milk, butter, pepper and one tea- 
spoonful sugar. 


CORN COFFEE. 

Brown in the oven good white flint corn, as you would 
roast green coffee. Put a teacup full of the whole grains in a 
coffee pot and pour over it one pint and a half of boiling water 
and set back on the stove to steep for two or three hours. Use 
as you would any other coffee with cream and sugar. This will 
last for several times, then add fresh grains. 


BEAUTIFUL PYRAMID OF FRUIT. 

Take a fine, ripe pineapple, peel and take out the eyes, stand 
it on a flat glass cake-stand or in the middle of a broad dish, take 
a sharp knife and slice down thin like an orange, not quite to 
the bottom so that it will not fall apart; sift over pulverized sugar 
several times. Now peel one dozen bananas, slice in thin strips 
and lay all around the pineapple, in fence-rows. Then one 


84 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


dozen oranges, cut the peeling and strip down and turn under ; 
then on the outside, large bunches of different kinds of grapes. 


NOVELTY DISH. 


Cook one quart of cranberries in one and a half cups of water 
until soft, adding two cups of sugar; strain through a colander; 
select a deep dish, put a layer of cranberries in the bottom of 
dish, slice nice ripe bananas for a layer over this, and continue 
to alternate these layers until dish is half-full. Make a meringue 
of the whites of four eggs and beat stiff with sugar, fill the dish 
full with this meringue and set in oven to brown; cool, and just 
before serving, cut some slices of bananas and lay around the 
edge of the dish, and dot it with some of the cranberry sauce. 
Very nice for dessert. 


PINEAPPLE JEULY: 


Peel and cut up ripe pineapples and cover them with water 
and cook until soft. Drain through a jelly-bag and measure the 
juice, allowing one pound of granulated sugar to one pint of 
juice. Boiland skim until it drops from the spoon. 


COMBINATION BLANC MANGE. 


Allow three pints of milk; put on one pint in a kettle, mix two 
and half tablespoonsful corn-starch with cold milk to make it 
smooth ; when the milk is hot, before it scalds, stir in this thick- 
ening two large tablespoonsful of sugar, a little salt, and add to 
the scalding milk, and stir constantly until thick and smooth; 
remove from the fire and flavor with rose water and just enough 
of cochineal extract (which is obtained of any druggist), to give 
it a pretty pink color; now pour into a bright tin cake-pan and 
set away to cool. Put on another pint of milk and proceed to 


MISCELLANEOUS. 85 


thicken and cook, adding sugar and salt; when done have ready 
melted two tablespoonsful chocolate and stir this into the blanc 
mange smooth; if the pink part already in the mold is cold 
put this chocolate part on top of that. Now proceéd with the 
other pint of milk as before and flavor this with lemon extract, 
and the chocolate part with vanilla. Put on the last over the two 
others and set the mold away on ice or cool place until wanted. 
When served turn out ona pretty dish, slice it like cake and 
serve with whipped cream sweetened and flavored with bitter 
almonds. Serve for dessert or tea. 


PICKLED CHERRIES. 


Take the finest and largest Morella cherries, fully ripe, 
either remove the stems or cut them short. Have ready a 
large glass jar; fill it two-thirds with cherries pricked with a 
needle; add one to two cups nice brown sugar; put in layers; a 
few cloves, fill with good vinegar, and tie up. Remember, the 
fruit must be dead-ripe. The cherries retain all their rich flavor 
and will not shrivel. 


PINEAPPLE PRESERVED. 


Take four pineapples, as ripe as you can get them, wash 
them clean, but do not pare off the rind or cut off the leaves. The 
rind and leaves left on while boiling keep in the flavor of the 
fruit. Put them whole into a clean iron pot, fill it with cold 
water and boil them until so tender you can pierce them with a 
straw ; now take them out of the water and drain them ; when 
cool enough to handle, pare them nicely, cut into round slices 
half-inch thick, and cut the core out leaving a hole in the middle. 
Weigh them and to each pound of fruit a pound of best 
white sugar; cover these with the sugar in layers on a flat dish ; 


86 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK, 


let stand twenty-four hours, then drain off the syrup and place 
the fruit injars. Boil the syrup until thick and pour hot over 
the fruit and seal up. 


NECTAR—A TEMPERANCE DRINK, 


Take two pounds of the best raisins and pick off the stems, 
seed and chop them; the grated yellow rind and juice of four 
fine lemons, two pounds of granulated sugar. Put the sugar 
in a kettle and melt it in a gallon of water. Boil and skim it half 
an hour, and while boiling hard, put in by degrees the raisins 
and lemons. Continue boiling about ten minutes; now pour 
into a stone crock and cover closely. Let stand three days, 
stirring it down twice daily, then strain it through a linen bag, 
bottle and seal. It will be fit for use in a fortnight. Take it in 
wine glasses with bits of crushed ice. 


MACARONI. 


Choose that of large pipe, clean and white; half-pound 
makes adish. Do not soak it, but wash and drain through a 
sieve. Boil it in a panof water, adding a lump of butter, size 
of an egg. It will be tender in half-hour; drain it and transfer 
to a deep dish; cut it in lengths of three inches. Between the 
layers, season with grated cheese, bits of fresh butter, pepper 
and salt, pour over one cup milk, and slices of three hard- 
boiled eggs; on the top, grated bread, and set in the oven to 
bake. 

SPANISH CREAM, 


Soak one-half box of Cox’s gelatine in a large cup of milk 
for one hour. Make a custard with the yellows of seven eggs, 
one and one-half cups sugar, one quart of milk; then stir in the 
soaked gelatine and beat it well. Flavor with lemon. When 


MISCELLANEOUS. 87 


nearly cold beat the whites of seven eggs until they stand alone, 
and beat well into the custard. Pour into molds and set on 
ice to harden. 


JELLY FOR SPANISH CREAM. 


Half box of gelatine, two gills of cold water. After soaking 
half-hour squeeze a large lemon into the gelatine, adding,all the 
-lemon and ten ounces, or ten tablespoonsful white sugar, then 
pour over all one pint fiercely boiling water and stir well until 
dissolved, Strain and set on ice to harden. When you turn 
out the Spanish cream on a flat dish, put the jelly around it 
and serve with rich cream. 


SARDINE SANDWICH. 


To be appetizing, the bread must be cut very thin and 
evenly spread with butter. Sardines should have skin and tail 
removed, be broken up fine with a silver fork, lemon juice 
sprinkled over it, then spread neatly on the slices of bread and 
butter and rolled up into long rolls. 


EGG SANDWICH. 

Boil hard, eight eggs. Use only the yellows, which grate or 
mash fine, season highly with pepper, salt, little mustard and 
vinegar to taste. Spread half inch thick on thin slices of bread . 
and butter, one slice on top of the other, If served for tea, 
grate the white or chop fine and cover each slice, lay on a flat 
dish and surround with sprigs of parsley. 


WILAT TO DO WITH STALE BREAD. 
Take all the clean, sweet pieces of stale bread, put to soak 
over night in milk-warm water; next morning drain off the 
water and rub through a colander; then add sweet milk, pinch of 


88 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


salt, one well beaten egg, and flour enough to stiffen into a hght 
batter. Have a hot griddle iron and the result will be most 
surprising, for these cakes are simply delicious. The batter must 
be about as thick as for buckwheat cakes or waffles. 


SPANISH FRITTERS. . 


Trim off the crust from stale (baker’s) bread—it should be very 
light—cut in squares and soak in a mixture of beaten egg, one 
cup of milk, two tablespoons sugar, little nutmeg and cinna- 
mon. Fry a light brown in butter and eat with stewed fruit 
or sauce. (This makes a nice home dessert. ) 


BELL’S BISCUIT. 

Measure one quart of flour, two teaspoonsful cream of tar- 
tar, one level teaspoon soda; sift all together with the flour 
three times; mix with sour milk and knead well. Very light 
when baked in a quick oven. 


MOCK OYSTER CORN. 


Grate the corn or cut twice from the cob, put into a bowl 
with two spoonsful of flour, two eggs, lump of melted butter, pep- 
per and salt, half cup of milk, one teaspoonful baking powder. 
Have your skillet hot and well greased and fry light brown on 
each side; shape like a fritter. | 


CRANBERRY POULTICE FOR ERYSIPELAS,~ 


Mash a cup of cranberries well, spread on a linen cloth and 
apply to the inflamed part. Renew when dry. Cooling and 
healing. | . 

ANOTHER CURE—SALT FOR ERYSIPELAS. 

Use a strong saturated solution of salt—strong as can be 

made—simply keep the parts covered with cloths wet with it; 


MISCELLANEOUS, 89 


at the same time cool the system with a dose of Epsom Salts 
mixed with lemon juice; eat a light diet. 


NEVER FAILING CHOLERA CURE. 
An excellent remedy for all bowel troubles—cholera, dysen- 
tery, diarrhea: 

Take equal parts of tincture of cayenne, tincture of opium, 
tincture of rhubarb, essence of peppermint, and spirits of cam- 
‘phor ; mix well. 

Dose: Fifteen to thirty drops in a wine-glass of water. Repeat 
every fifteen or twenty minutes until relief is obtained.. I have 
cured the most obstinate cases with this remedy. Good. for 
cramp colic also. 


BORAX AND PULVERIZED SUGAR FOR COLD. 

When first taking cold and sneezing take a pinch of pulver- 
ized borax and sugar and sniff up each nostril; if taken in time 
the cold will all be gone in one hour. Use every half hour. 
Mix in a close box and keep in a convenient place, one ounce of 
pulverized borax, one teaspoonful of pulverized sugar. 


90 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


HINTS ON NBALTH. 


Never lean with your back against anything that is cold. 
Never begin a journey until the breakfast 1s eaten. Never take 
warm drinks and then immediately go out in the cold air. 
Keep the back between shoulder blades well covered. In going 
out into open air after leaving a warm room, breathe with the 
mouth closed. Never go to bed with cold or damp feet. 
Never omit regular bathing. When hoarse speak ‘as little 
as possible. Merely warm the back by the fire and never con- 
tinue keeping the back exposed to the heat after it has become 
comfortable. 

INFALLIBLE CATARREH CURE, 


Get blood root, dry, scrape off the outside, then beat the 
scraped root in a cloth and sift through a muslin cloth. Meas- 
ure one teaspoonful, one-half teaspoonful pulverized alum, two 
tablespoonsful strained honey; mix together in a pint pitcher and 
pour over one pint boiling water; set aside closely covered with 
a towel for three hours, then strain it and bottle. Keep always 
ina cool place. Use three times daily after meals by sniffing 
up a small quantity from the hand into each nostril. 


FOR BOILS. 
If in need of a poultice for boils or any swelling, take thick 
sweet cream and heat until oily and thicken with flour; it will 
be found very soothing and bring to a head very rapidly. 


HOUSEHOLD NOTES. Fh 


Pou ie bl OT DON OTLTES. 


TO CLEAN FURNITURE. 

Get a mixture of three parts linseed oil (boiled) and one 
part spirits of turpentine. Rub on with a woolen cloth and 
polish dry with another woolen cloth. This will make your 
furniture look like new. 


TO REMOVE BRUISES FROM FURNITURE. 


Melt together equal parts of yellow beeswax and turpentine, 
rub on the bruise with a woolen cloth, and then with a dry 
cloth, and the stain will disappear. 


LAMP CHIMNEYSs. 
Lamp chimneys should not be washed in soap and water. 
If much stained and smoked, soak them an hour in hot, strong 
soda water or ammonia, then polish with damp salt and rub off 
with soft paper. They will be clear and shining. 


TO REMOVE THE YELLOW COAT FROM KNIFE HANDLES. 

Take Spanish whiting and mix into a soft paste with kero- 
sene. ‘Take an old kid glove or chamois skin and rub briskly, 
then polish with paper. 


TO MEND LAMPS WHICH HAVE BECOME LOOSENED IN 
TAH, SOCKET. 

’ Melt alum in a cup on the stove. Have your lamp clean 

and socket well wiped out and dry, place convenient to the 

stove; when the alum is thoroughly melted fill the socket full and 


992 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


setthe globe immediately into the socket. It will harden in a 
few seconds and you can not pull it out. . 


A CEMENT TO STOP UP CRACKS IN THt, HEA Tat 
OR -FIREPLACE, 

Sift ashes (common wood ashes), measure eight large 
spoonsful, and five of unslaked lime; mix with linseed oil into 
a stiff paste and fill the crack and it will harden to the solidity 
of a rock. 


TO TAKE INK OUT OF 7 CAKPEL. 


If ink should be upset on the carpet, take up immediately on 
a blotter, letting it absorb all it can, then cover thickly with salt ; 
renew as it absorbs the ink, and brush off and wipe with borax 
water. 


TO DRAW OUT KEROSENE 'OIL FROM A CARPET: 

If kerosene oil is accidentally spilled upon a carpet, cover 
thickly with buckwheat flour; let it alone until it absorbs all the 
grease and renew the application and brush off well with a whisk 
broom and no trace of it will be left. 


USES ORVS Ads te 


The most simple way to clean the inside of washbowls, bath, 
stationary marble basins, and pitchers on which a sort of dark 
scum or deposit from long standing forms if not properly cared 
for, is just to rub them with dry rock salt with a damp cloth; it 
takes off all dirt and leaves them bright and shining. 


VALUE. OF SALT; 
Severe pains in the bowels and stomach are speedily relieved 
by the application of a bag of hot salt. A weak solution for a 
cold in the head is a complete cure snuffed up into the nostrils 


HOUSEHOLD NOTES, 93. 


from the palm of the hand. Asa dentifrice, salt and water is 
very cleansing and also hardens the gums. Wash the scalp of 
the head in strong warm salt and water; it will keep it from falling 
out. When broiling steak throw a little salt on the coals and the 
blaze will not annoy. A little in starch boiled or raw will pre- 
vent the irons from sticking. If new calicoes are allowed to 
lie in strong salt and water for an hour before the first washing 
the colors are less likely to fade. Damp salt will remove the 
dark stain from a silver §poon defaced by an egg. 


BED BUGS. 


Make a saturated solution of salt and kerosene as thick as 
you can make it, and apply with a feather to all crevices of the 
bedstead, and you will have no more bugs. Stop up all cracks 
and places where the slats lie. Ina week youcan brush it all 
out without injury to the furniture. 


TO EXTERMINATE RED AND BLACK ANTS. 

Ants make their appearance in warm weather about the first 
of June. Geta ten cent bottle, sufficient to last two summers, 
wash your shelves in closets, safes and pantry with hot alum 
water and apply the sassafras oil with a feather in all crevices. 
Renew once in two weeks and you will not be bothered with 
ants. 

LABOR SAVING SOAP. 

Purchase seven and one-half pounds sal soda, one ounce 
borax, half ounce sulphate soda and eight pounds good yellow 
bar soap. Dissolve the sal soda, borax, sulphate of soda in 
four and one-half gallons of soft water, dissolve until not a 
lump remains; shave up the bar soap and melt in the solution 
already dissolved and boiling on the fire, keep it stirred while 


94 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK. 


melting until all the soap is dissolved. When the soap is 
melted it is done. If inclined to boil over throw in a little 
cold water; take off and let stand an hour or so and pour up 
into tubs or jars. You can perfume it with sassafras oil if you 
wish. This makes fifty pounds soap; cost, about eighty cents. 
Made in one hour. 


TO PAINT AGPLOOR: 


You can do this very nicely by using two gallons of water, 
eight pounds yellow ochre, half pound glue, and one pound 
dry white lead; boil all together in a tin boiler; use a white- 
wash brush to paint with, and put it on boiling hot. When 
dry, go over it with boiled flaxseed oil, using a cloth. You can 
walk on it the same day. 


PLUSH GARMENTS—TO PUT AWAY. 


You should not fold it away, but hang it up by its own 
shoulder support; after putting a generous lump of camphor- 
gum in each pocket, and suspending one or two lumps from 
the shoulder support wrapped in a muslin cloth; make a muslin 
or dark cambric bag sufficient to draw over the garment; sew 
up the top; over this wrap newspapers and let the garment 
hang in a clean closet for the summer. 


SOME EXCELLENT RECIPES. 95 


Some Excellent Recipes. 


HOKGA, COUGH: 

Boil one ounce of flaxseed in a pint of water, strain and add 
one tablespoonful strained honey, one ounce rock candy, juice 
of twolemons. Mix all together and boil well. Drink as hot 
as possible and as often as the cough is troublesome. 


LOS IN lA FELON. 


When a felon first begins to make its appearance, take a 
lemon, cut off one end, put the finger in and the longer you 
keep it there the better. 


SURE CURE FOR A FELON. 

Take equal parts of soft soap, unslaked lime and turpen- 
tine. Mix into a paste or salve and fill a stall with it and insert 
the finger. The pain will be great, but the felon is drawn to 
the surface and soon heals up. 


REMEDY FOR CHILBLAINS. 

The following is a sure cure: Take a handful of peach 
leaves and pour boiling water on them, let stand until cool 
enough not to burn the flesh, then place the feet in the water 
fifteen minutes. Do this three or four times and it will effect a 
cure. Gather the leaves before the frost touches them. 


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